
Watched on Friday October 31, 2025.
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-monster-club/7/

Watched on Friday October 31, 2025.
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-monster-club/7/

Watched on Friday October 31, 2025.
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/witchs-night-out/3/

And so, my journey through the entire ‘Hellraiser’ franchise draws to a close (for now) with a definite bang in the form of the 2022 reboot/scraping of the DTV and previous Streaming movies into the garbage that is ‘Hellraiser. and a definite palette cleanse this was! Even if it is the worst sequel to ‘Inside out’ and the new emotions scare me profoundly…
The plot this time follows Riley, a recovering drug and alcohol addict whos living in an apartment share with her brother, his boyfriend and another roommate in an attempt to get clean. But Riley has a bad habit of not really being totally dedicated to her goals and has recently shacked up with a bit of a bad guy who drinks, deals the occasional bit of drugs and is on the lookout to swipe stuff when given the chance.
Rileys brother is at his whits end with her, She’s been late on rent now consistently for months, and seemingly would rather be out with her boyfriend doing GOD knows what than actually trying to fix her situation. Thats when her boyfriend has a GREAT idea!, see, he recently lost his job working at a storage facility, but before he left he memorised the access codes, and he distinctly remembered that, before leaving the job, there was one shipping container left, VERY likely left there by some rich guy who forgot it even existed…
The plan? break into the facility, break into the storage container, swipe anything worth cash not nailed down, and everythings resolved! Rileys reluctant, but with little else to lose, she goes along with it, but on breaking into the container all the pair find is a safe. and in the safe, a wooden box containing a weird ornament. The pair take it with them, but are majorly annoyed at the bust, so they decide to grab a few drinks.
Returning to the apartment drunk, Riley and her brother end up arguing and after pushing her brother one too many times, he kicks her out of the apartment in a rage. She heads to the local park to cool off, but remembers she still has that weird ornament with her, so; she takes a better look at it, and on messing around with it a bit, she suddenly finds herself deeply woozy…and sat before THE most terrifying interdimensional beings she’s ever seen in her life, who speak in vaguenesses, before putting a hit on her brother.
And this encounter will see Riley and her friends sent on a journey to understand more about this ‘puzzlebox’, and a billionaire who gave his soul to play with it.
And, I honestly got to the point with this franchise where I genuinely considered the possibility that it may never ACTUALLY be good again. So to end things on…probably as good a high as im going to get is ABSOLUTELY a welcome thing.
My biggest criticism of this film is simply that its 2 hours long. Apart from the fact that the pacing of this one is pretty pedestrian, it really isnt in a rush to get where its going and it could have EASILY lost 20 minutes and not touched the sides. Regular readers will know that, if your movies 2 hours or longer, the odds of me EVER having the time to conciously sit down and rewatch it after the first time, is 10% or less. And thats a shame, I feel had this film been cut a bit more leaner, down to 90 or 100 minutes, not only do I feel like the pacing would have benefitted a lot, but this probably would have become my second favourite ‘Hellraiser’ film after ‘Hellbound’.
As it stands, the characters are purposfully flawed, have deep and rich complexities and get MORE than enough time to develop across the runtime. the tone is absolutely jet black with scarce moments of lighter horror to help keep the film away from being truely oppressive. The dialogue glorious, the character interactions largely feel belivable, and the newer take on the cenobites…while not my favourite take, is probably about as good as it could possibly get for a series 11 entries in, hitting the ‘erase all’ button as it goes.
In essence, this is a film i’ll rarely revisit, NOT because I didnt enjoy it, but purely because, its a quite bleak film in places with lots of VERY harrowing gore and violence, meaning i’ll have to simultaineously be in the right headspace to appreciate it AND have 2+ hours to spare…Which these days is an incredibly rare thing honestly.
Direction and cine are sound, they get the balance just right between experimentation and ensuring the film adheres to the principles of technical execution. There are some moments here that are positively glorious, and as an; admittedly somewhat limited ‘Hellraiser’ fan, I was absolutely blown away to see the cenobites and all that comes with them, ACTUALLY given a half decent budget and a fair crack at trying to look cool. They almost certainly succeed in my opinion.
Compositions are rock solid, the edit breaths a little loose for me, the sequence constructions pretty razor, I cant fault the edit honestly. lighting and colour use is absolutely perfect for this kind of film and the use of CGI is minimalist, but welcome where its used. Honestly? this is just a very pretty, VERY disturbing little picture.
Performance wise? Odessa A’zion as Riley is a bit of a mixed bag, initially; I found her physicality fine, but her line deliveries were a bit too polished and staged, however, as the film progressed and her character gets a more broad range to work with, I found her very enjoyable, much more naturalistic and a really pretty solid choice honestly.
Goran Visnjic as Voigt dips in and out of the film across the runtime, but I must say I really enjoyed his performance too, bringing a glossy, celeb style ‘chic’ with a viciously malevolent streak to it, he also works a great range and was definitely worth sticking around for!
As for the new pinhead? Jamie Clayton is absolutely brill in the role, while I may never full adapt to a Pinhead with an American accent (in fact, the fact most of the cast are American accented did feel a bit weird to me) I have to admit she absolutely blew me away with a fantastic and intimidating screen presence, and the perfect tone for line delivery. I REALLY hope we get a sequel to this one, as i’d just love to see more of her performance honestly.
And the soundtrack, similar to Halloween (2018) we have here a score influenced by the first 2 Hellraiser movies, with remixes of tracks FROM those first 2 films, married up to new compositions, it sounds gorgeous, I loved it, and while I dont think i’d necessarily listen to this one isolated, I dont think they could have handled it any better in terms of how its implemented in this film.
Ultimately; I really enjoyed ‘Hellraiser’ (2022), I just…REALLY wish they did a shorter cut of it that I could more easily chuck on when im in the mood. It resets the base for the franchise, modernising all the stuff I loved and enhancing it even beyond the boundaries ‘Hellbound’ set. One i’d recommend checking out, especially if you’ve been burnt out on the endless DTV sequels. I REALLY hope this thing gets a shorter, punchier sequel. Because I’ll ABSOLUTELY be checking that one out when it drops!
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/hellraiser-2022/

Hot on the heels of ‘Halloween’ and following a brief stint making TV Movies, John Carpenters return to the big screen with ‘The Fog’ is simultaineously the primary blueprint for his career in film for the next decade or so, and a development on what had come before.
The plot centers around the coastal town of ‘Antonio Bay’, a picturesque location on the cusp of celebrating the centenary of its founding. Across most of the first act we’re introduced to the locals; Local DJ Stevie Wayne who manages the 6pm – 1am slot on K.A.B Radio (Jazz and easy listening if you must know) theres the town mayor Kathy, whos overly anxious to ensure the festivities around the centenary go without a hitch, local priest Father Patrick Malone, and town local and avid fisherman Nick Castle, who’s just picked up a hitchiker Elizabeth Solley
At midnight on the 21st of April (the day of the centenary), for an hour; Bizarre happenings occur around Antonio bay, windows smash, car alarms sound off, tremors and earthquakes occur and paranormal activity seems to take place. At the church a brick from the chapel appears to fall from the wall, revealing to Father patrick a diary…a diary from his grandfather…one that contains a terrible secret.
The next day K.A.B Report on a missing fishing boat, which is recognised by Nick as belonging to one of his good friends, him adn Elizabeth head down to the harbour to investigate, while Stevie is woken up by her child who appears to have found an interesting piece of driftwood, with half the name of a ship carved into it. and Kathy and her PA begin the rollout of the festivities.
But on heading up to the chapel to liase with Father Patrick, they’re taken into a back room, and the terrible details from his grandfathers diary are brought to light. It transpires that 100 years ago, Patricks Grandfather (also a priest) along with 5 other members of the fledgling town betrayed a nearby lepar coloney looking to relocate to within a mile of Antonio bay for easier trading and better quality of life. They were led by a once wealthy business man who wanted to use his wealth to ensure good tidings with the community by helping establish a foundation.
However; on the night where clear passage was supposed to take place, Patricks Grandfather betrayed the coloney, sending their ship crashing into the rocks, while he pocketed the gold and used it to found the church and establish the community that ultimately grew into Antonio bay, the final sight, was a mysterious fog rolling into the bay covering the corpses of the coloney and an heir swearing vengence.
Well; at this point I dont have to say anything more, you can very likely guess what happens on the night of the Centenary festivities.
This was my first time catching ‘The Fog’, and im kind of sad I sat on this one for as long as I did. In many ways it feels like a much more developed, slower burn take on the suspense cinema developed for ‘Halloween’ while at the same time it also has proto elements of Carpenters signature direction and producership, that would seep into his later works such as ‘Halloween 2 and 3’ and ‘The Thing’. Its a film trading solely on characters and atmosphere, and gave me quite strong ‘Jaws’ vibes at times. The horror comes from just how closely they tie the audience to the characters, they spend at least half the film building up the core casts complex characters, attempting to invest the audience in these characters and this world, before pulling the rug from under them in the 3rd act, taking the sleepy and scenic coastal town and turning into a living nightmare.
Im not a huge ‘slowburn’ fan, but the sheer prettiness of this picture, combined with the total likability of the characters absolutely kept me watching from start to finish uninterrupted. its such a naturalistic feeling production, that the supernatural elements feel like the perfect contrast. the pacing is slow, but not glacial, edging in just the right balance of character moments and plot development so that you never feel the films running dry. at 90 minutes on the nose, I feel it keeps a consistent pace with a rock solid act structure gently inching up the tension and atmosphere until we hit that final 30 minutes of all out horror action.
Tonally; the films kind of playful, theres some very light comedy, a bit of slice of life, but the horror elements bring with them some incredibly dark moments and heavy suspense. its a lovely contrast thats satisfying to sit through, and they never linger too heavily on one aspect or another, they seem to know JUST the right time to throw a little light in to offset the dark.
Direction wise, this is a gorgeous production, creative and vibrant world building, Carpenter having had a few more productions under his belt by this point delivers frankly a masterclass in character pieces and location work from a directoral standpoint. While there are moments here and there that do look a little cheap when watched in 2025 in UHD, I can overlook that for the gorgeous coastal location work, the lush greenery and the deep rich blues of the town at night. Carpenter here, is pretty much at the start of a HELL of a consistent run that will include ‘Halloween 2’, ‘Escape from New York’, ‘The Thing’ and ‘Christine’ to name a few. and here, he’s already more or less firmed up his style and vision to the point that you can more or less instantly identify it as a Carpenter production. I was honestly blown away.
Same goes for the cine really, extremely well composed shots stand out as distinct, the use of varying shades of dark blue to white act almost as a form of chiascuro lighting in and of itself. Shots are rich, deep, varied and very much open to experimentation. Sequences are masterfully crafted, allowing the tension to breath easy, the films not in a rush to get to the scares and that slow and mindful editing results in a pressure cooker of a movie thats a total trip from start to finish.
Performance wise? Get OUTTA here. Jamie Lee Curtis, Hal Holbrook, Tom Atkins, Charles Cypher, Janet Leigh, and the ever delightful Adrienne Barbau. and not a stinker in the pack. This is an incredible cast list, everyones pretty much perfect in their roles. I honestly have no notes. They play it exactly how I’d wanna see it played. and barring the fact Atkins is ‘Stache’ less for this film (a serious crime I fear) Im willing to overlook that for just how quality it really is.
And thats not even to MENTION the absolutely amazing soundtrack, composed by Carpenter, while it may not be as iconic as ‘Halloween’ its beautiful synth compositions that fit the moody tone of the film perfectly and were frankly beautiful to hear. I was a big fan.
‘The Fog’ may not be an ‘everyday’ watch, and the slow pacing may be offputting to some, but for me? I really loved it. Its a totally atmospheric immersion of a film that gently pulls you in, and then hangs you over a cliff face till the credits. Rich, detailed, its an incredible work. An absolute ‘must see’ at least once, and I highly recommend you do.

Tonights Halloween viewing courtesy once again from Tubi see’s me and the missus checking out, what can only be described really as a YA haunted house movie that felt aimed at the kind of audience that think ‘The Conjuring’ is too much, but that they’re too big grown up for ‘Goosebumps’.
‘The House of the Witch’ has a similar plotting to ‘Night of the Demons’ in some regards. A group of slightly horned up college teens decide to spend a night near Halloween, having a party at a local haunt spot where allegedly a woman was drowned after being accused of being a Witch. The house, which is borded up, is rumoured to hold the angry spirit of the witch and anyone who enters, never leaves.
Most folks just egg the place, but our teens head up there, begin to party down and make smoochy face, when all of a sudden; things start getting spooky and all the doors lock tight, with no means of escape. It quickly becomes apparent that the folk lore IS true, and with that our teens enter a ‘kill or be killed’ game of survival against a terrifying force with amazing powers.
I’ll be honest, this was kind of middle of the road for me personally, but I could see a younger ‘pre-teen’ audience getting a bit of a buzz from this. Its essentially a bit of an amalgum of haunted house and supernatural horror films from 1985 up to the present day (of 2017) but the key thing here is everythings been softened. Theres genuine horror moments, but they’ve been sanded down a bit to make them less horrifying, blood guts and gore is present, but only in quick cuts and small amounts dotted across the runtime to protect the kids, swearing is reduced to a couple harder swears, but otherwise its ‘Damns’ and ‘Hells’ for most of the runtime.
Basically; this is the movie you put on for kids aged 8-13 or puritanical religious folk who wanna see ‘The HARDCORE stuff’ when you know you cant really show them ‘The HARDCORE stuff’ without causing problems… It gives the illusion of being a harder horror movie, while actually just kind of being quite gentle and a bit more family friendly.
The plot itself is kind of generic, the pacings a little on the slow side, the characters are all horror archtypes from decades passed, the tone is pretty straight cut, but again, aiming more for a teen and pre teen audience so its not THAT straight cut as a horror. The dialogues kind of weak and a bit cheesy in places, it doesnt flow particularly naturalistically. I’d say its a sturdy, but wholley unoriginal work. a good example of the genre, but not the best example of the genre.
The directions pretty by the numbers, I will give Alex Merkin some credit, there are some creative moments here, especially in the more horror driven moments, that I felt were pretty well handled. But ultimately this is just a fairly safe production that isnt here to rock the boat of court controversy. Its here to deliver some ‘mild peril’ and then retreat to the sitting room for cookies and a bible reading.
The cine is actually pretty solid, it has a feint whiff of TV movie vibes to it, compositions and sequence building is pretty solid, again, the more creative moments of this film were fun to catch and on the whole I think it tells the story visually quite well, though there are a few plot gaps that would have been nice to have seen visualised.
The edits pretty tight, but the scores kind of unremarkable. and…Im not going to pick on any one member of the cast here as it looks like a lot of the players are first timers here…But broadly speaking, I didnt care for any of the main characters performances here. theres a range of reasons, some cast members were playing things a bit too theatrical, some seemingly couldnt quite nail the tone needed to play in horror, some got a bit TOO into it which would work if everyone else was doing that, but they wernt…So they just look a bit odd. and there were a couple of performances here that were really just…pretty dire honestly. The performances are probably the weakest element of this film and kind of dragged things down a bit for me honestly.
Ultimately; I couldnt hate this one, its doing a public duty of making accessable horror for people who are either too young or too spooked to watch ‘proper’ horror films and need that halfway house of ‘Spooky enough, but not TOO spooky’ to help give them a foot in the door. Its a nice thing to see, and a bit of a dying art honestly. While its absolutely a flawed production, and I cant really say it does anything TOO out there or distinct to make it stand out. I think it works fine enough for what its trying to do, and I think I could recommend it to parents who have horror kids (though, i’d maybe watch it first just to be on the safe side) who want them to have a ‘grown up’ halloween experience, without having to worry about little Timmy or Timantha recreating scenes from ‘Terrifyer’ or ‘Cannibal Holocaust’ during recess…
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/house-of-the-witch/

So, probably a quick bit of context. I watched ‘Dragonball Z’ back in the 90s and early 2000s on TV, and caught pretty much the entire series that way. I watched most of ‘Dragonball GT’ in the mid 2000s as well, but I missed quite a few episodes and eventually gave up on it. Due to the cost of the season sets in the UK up until recently, the last time I had any dealings with anything ‘Dragonball’ related was probably 2005/2006. Then due to some VERY lucky breaks, I somehow managed to secure the entirity of ‘Dragonball’ (DVD), ‘Dragonball Z Kai’ (Blu), ‘Dragonball GT’ (DVD) and all the ‘Dragonball Z Movies and TV Specials’ (Blu) for approximately £190 ($250)…I was a very happy boy.
Me and my partner recently finished watching ‘Kai’, her for the first time, and me revisiting it in its new ‘condensed’ format. and as of last weekend, we both caught ‘Dragonball’ for the first time and really enjoyed it as well. and; with us moving onto the Movies and TV specials next. I figured it was probably as good a place as any to start slightly out of order, by watching ‘Bardock – The Father of Goku’ as, being fresh off the back of ‘Dragonball’ I figured it would play as a nice bookend, acting as both a prologue to the ‘Z’ movies, and an epilogue to ‘Dragonball’, filling in the gaps that were never really explained in the series while introducing the main players for the first couple of arcs in ‘Z’.
Clocking in at around 40-50 minutes, its a fine enough little special in which we’re given much more information about the Saiyans as a race, a better look at how Freiza operated prior to the events on Namek, some nice cameos from ‘Z’ characters shortly to be better introduced. and a plot revolving around Bardock and his gang, working for Freiza, and Bardock himself gaining psychic powers that reveal terrifying glimpses into his future, and the future of his planet.
I’ll be honest? I thought this one was fine enough, but I dont think i’d go out of my way to catch it. Its a fine enough little short story with some really nice moments dotted throughout. But I cant say I absolutely fell in love with it, it feels a tad rushed at times, and I was hoping for a bit more time on Planet Vegeta to really help give the audience just…a bit more of an idea of who or what the Saiyans were culturally…instead a good chunk of the special is just Bardock figuring out whats happening to him, and then an equally big chunk is him trying to warn people of imminent danger. Like; its fine…but I just wish there was a bit more to it, even if there was just a bit more character development for Bardock, his gang and Gokus mum…it all just feels a bit surface level, with just the occasional spark of genuinely moving moments.
The visuals are delightful throughout, with some incredible art design and the animation for the fight Choreography is solid too! The dialogues pretty solid, Freiza and Vegeta probably steal the show though with several foreshadowing moments and some definite character highlights.
I think the only other thing that spoiled this one was, on the Bluray version theres an option to listen to the Japanese audio with the original Japanese scoring…or the English dub with THE most horrendous early 2000s ‘Sum 41’esq pop punk…stuff. i’ve heard in a LONG time…a third option of the English dub with the Japanese soundtrack would have really been the best of both worlds and probably would have made me score this higher, because the English soundtrack is WAY too overbearing for this.
All in all? this is just a nice little extra in my opinion, not essential, but if you’ve watched all of ‘Dragonball’ and ‘Dragonball Z’ you’ll probably get a kick out of seeing stuff that was alluded to in both the main series acutally get a bit more fleshed out and ‘realised’. Probably worth catching once if your working your way through the various series…but definitely not ‘must see’. Your milage may vary…But I had a fun enough time!
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/dragon-ball-z-bardock-the-father-of-goku/

The tenth entry in the ‘Hellraiser’ franchise…and expectations were the highest that low expectations can be set. After ‘Hellraiser: Revelations’…existed. Almost entirely for the purposes of retaining the IP to ‘Hellraiser’ long enough for Dimension films and Miramax to complete the preproduction work on an ‘ACTUALLY GOOD’ Hellraiser movie. I went into this one with a bit of a cocky swagger, I’d been promised a ‘good’ Hellraiser movie after burning through most of my October watching quite possibly the biggest flameout a horror series has ever had.
The DTV years for Hellraiser wernt kind, and after suffering through ‘Inferno’, ‘Deader’ and ‘Hellseeker’, only to experience the splash of cold sick to the face that was ‘Revelations’ This film was all but certain to get nailed on as one of the top 5 Hellraiser films by simply NOT randomly deciding to be anything other than a ‘Hellraiser’ movie and sticking the landing. and I think they kinda sorta largely succeed in the brief honestly.
Up front, I’ll be frank. this is SO far removed from the quality and standards set by the first 2 ‘Hellraiser’ movies, that it cant even really be mentioned in the same company as them. However; for me? this film grinds all the DTV entries into the dust, and even gives ‘Bloodline’ and ‘Hellraiser: III’ a run for its money. In the same year 2018’s ‘Halloween’ soft reboot hit screens, This film kind of attempts similar…but not really.
The plot? Its basically ‘What if Hellraiser, but also ‘Se7en’…but we already did that kind of movie…so what if that…but again…but good.’ as were reintroduced to the world of Hellraiser via ‘The Auditor’ a Cenobite working on behalf of Pinhead judging the scourge of mankind to punish them effectively. Enter; ‘The Preceptor’ a sadist serial killer who murders his victims in line with the 10 commandments. his…particularly gory and unpleasent murders have drawn the attention of a trio of detectives who begin working on tracking down the mysterious killer. However, when the detectives find a clue that leads them to a child murderer from a previous case whos mysteriously gone missing. The detectives cross paths with the Auditor who takes a shine to one of them. Leading to a VERY dark rabbit hole of mystery and a centuries long holy war…
And I feel this is the first film in a LONG time to really get close to nailing the aesthetic, tone and vibe of what I feel a ‘Hellraiser’ film should be. Most of the DTV era of Hellraiser films were either horror/thrillers that had been re-written to force Pinhead into them, or they were ‘hellraiser’ films written by people who’d failed to understand what the cenobites really were, and just kind of…focussed on Pinhead and turned him into whatever kind of ‘slasher’ adjacent being the narrative called for him to be.
‘Hellraiser: Judgement’ is a viscerally nasty film with some genuinely unpleasent imagery that at times had notes of the original and ‘Hellbound’ and while thats welcome, it does kind of end up ultimatley being its folly. Because, in my opinion, they do rather overegg it. One of the reasons I kind of love ‘Hellbound’ is because they use graphic gore sparingly, but when they do it, it’s intense and works a contrast against the rest of the movie, genuinely making me wince at times.
Here? it happens a LOT, even in places it isnt really needed, they just do it anyway…And it kind of ends up heading in the direction of the ‘Hostel’ films as a result, which I wasnt as keen on.
By this point the ‘Hellraiser’ series has had at least 4 entries that have seen some kind of ‘investigation’ or investigative lead tracking down the cenobites. And this is absolutely (in my opinion) the best film to tackle that style, but to say im fatigued with this setup, would be a bit of an understatement.
The plot itself is fine, a little derivitive, but we’ll take what we can get at this point. The characters are all fairly well developed with some nice twists and turns that genuinely caught me off guard on the first watch, but make sense in retrospective. I like how they frame the cenobites in this entry restoring a bit more of the mystery to Pinhead and introducing a kind of ‘holy war’ between heaven and hell.
It feels like an entry that shows the Cenobites nearer to the end of their power than their beginning and their is a bit of a whiff of finality about it all. Which I honestly kind of appreciated at this point. While some could argue it contradicts ‘Bloodline’ to do so. I personally was always of the opinion that Cenobites are interdimensional and that we’ve been seeing their chronology out of order in order to see our chronology linerly.
I will say, I did have mixed feelings on the films need to tie things back to the first two films, they dont really do anything overt, which I appreciated after several botched ‘homages’ in previous entries…But at this point in my viewing life. I find the idea of referencing other better films, even in a subtle way, a bit ‘ick’ inducing if im honest.
The pacings pretty decent, at an hour and 20 its about as long as i’d like a movie like this to run, the act structuring is solid and tonally it mixes some very light humour with ‘The Auditor’ into a jet black horror thats splatterific, obscene at times and managed to hold my attention throughout.
The direction is pretty rock solid. Barring a somewhat rickety ‘final shot’ which was a bit dissapointing, and a bit of a reliance on stock footage for locations. I was quite impressed, the film is open to some creative experimentation, isnt relying on CGI chronically and most importantly IS trying to show the story through the visuals, rather than just telling the audience. Somewhat dissapointingly; the director has said he’d have been happy for this film to have a sequel of spin off. And a TV show that continued this story and opened up ‘the holy war’ was in development. But I assume isnt happening. and thats a real shame as I think they could have built something even more out there and interesting in framework this film sets up.
The cine is pretty solid as well, shots are largely well composed, and while the colour grade is once again back to washed out, dingey ‘desaturation-vision’ they at least bother to make contrasts between the different levels that the Cenobites inhabit, which itself adds to the existing lore. If there are any criticisms here, its with the edit, I dont feel like the editor handled the more horror driven scenes well, the more ‘day to day’ detective scenes were handled fine to good for the most part. But when it came to horror, the editing rule seems to have been just ‘cut as quickly as possible between 2-3 different gory/unpleasent images for 5 second blasts’…It felt messy, and I know its to create a sense of loss of control or chaos…But even so. its overused here and made it feel cheap.
Performance wise? Probably a controversial take, but i’m gonna say it. Paul T. Taylor is a rock solid Pinhead in this movie, I really enjoyed his turn here, its a real shame that they’re unlikely to get him back, and (the controversial bit) Doug Bradley is 71 years old at the time of writing, In my opinion, his last few appearences as Pinhead were just kind of unremarkable, and given his age, the necessity to find a suitable ‘handover’ actor for the role made sense at the time, and continues to make sense now. Taylor looks the part, gives a great vocal performance, a fantastic physical turn. I’d have loved to have seen him done more honestly.
Damon Carney plays the lead detective on the case, and hes a rock solid lead too, bringing a lot of energy and a great physical range to the film. he has some nice twists and turns to deal with and I think he moves through those fairly effortlessly with a decent turn.
Gary J. Tunnicliffe plays ‘The Auditor’ alongside directing duties, and again, I think he offers probably the most interesting additions to the ‘Hellraiser’ series since ‘Bloodline’ and adds just a nice subtle contrast of humour to a series thats been BEGGING to have SOMETHING contrast its darker nature without just going full goofy for the better part of 18 years at this point. and I think he really nails it honestly.
‘Hellraiser: Judgement’ is probably the only entry post ‘Bloodline’ that I could actually see myself solidly revisiting in future, its imperfect. But it knows what it wants to be, and largely succeeds in doing it. Probably not the best film to introduce someone to the series with. I think if you were to watch this film straight after ‘Hellbound’ you’d have the makings of a pretty solid trilogy on your hands. Put it this way, with only the 2022 ‘Hellraiser’ remake left on my list to check out. This is the only ‘Hellraiser’ film past ‘Bloodline’ that I would happily recommend checking out.
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/hellraiser-judgment/

Another day, another random supernatural horror film found in the back end of Tubi. And…on the one hand, I wasnt particularly OFFENDED by the presence of this movie…But as the credits rolled, I was just kind of left with the kind of hollow feeling that you can only really TRUELY get from a film that comes to the table with nothing, says nothing and leaves with nothing.
In essence, this is a supernatural/paranormal haunted house movie. Its non linear and opens with a cop exploring an abandoned home where, in 1988 a suspected ‘cult’ ritual killing happend in which only one woman managed to survive, while 4 people died. Now, a group of ‘paranormal documentarians’ are taking a man named John who’s partner Michelle is part of this group back to the house, as Johns been having visions of the house and is reluctantly hopeful in finding some answers.
From here, the film jumps back and forth between John being interviewed by a criminal psychologist, the police trying to piece together the case on the ground, and flashbacks to our group setting up for a seance, while spooky shenanigans occur. And, if you do intend to watch this movie, I wont spoil much here…Other than to issue a PSA to all upcoming writers and script editors…Please. I beg you, if your going to do an ‘unreliable narrator’ storyline, make it clear that the unreliable narrator is unreliable up front. I do NOT want to get 70 minutes into an 88 minute movie to ONLY THEN find out that the vast majority of what ive seen or been told so far may or may not be true, and that everything from that point to the credits may be false also.
This film isnt great, but I was rooting for it for the most part because, while it wasnt the best made film i’ve ever seen, it had fun ish moments and there were some half decent twists and turns. But the ‘unreliable narrator’ trope being dropped on this film around the start of the 3rd act with no warm up whatsoever felt like the scriptwriters and directors were trying to be clever…and instead poured cold water on the whole production because, you’ve just essentially told me the car I bought was made of construction paper…and your expecting me to clap. No.
Across the board this films just average. The scripts plot, for a haunted house movie? hits most of the tropes common with late 2000’s and early 2010s paranormal horror. You’d think the found footage element would pep the film up a bit, but it doesnt, because they dont really try anything new here, literally everything in this film is cliche tropes from Haunted house/paranormal movies of the last 25 years combined with plot tropes you quite literally can set your watch to. Throughout this whole film, I kept being reminded of ‘Deadstream’ not in a fond way…in a ‘Id rather be watching ‘Deadstream’ kind of way.
I think the biggest problem is how the film chooses to spend its time really, clocking in at 82 minutes, the film feels bizarrely rushed, especially in the back end, when a lot of the plotting is reliant on audiences just…not really questioning anything. I feel like a lot of detail around the muders, the history of the house and the tension building are just…not present here at all, and the result is a film that instead focusses WAY too much on the lead in to the house exploration, and the gang setting up tech…and nowhere NEAR enough time making me actually give a damn about the circumstances.
All the characters are generic horror stock cliches, again the script isnt trying anything new, the ‘revelations’ that turn up are kind of unremarkable in the year of our lord 2015. again, they arnt BAD perse…they’re just totally middle of the road and didnt really do much for me.
Same goes with the direction and cine. Non of its particularly bad, but it feels trapped somewhere between a studio films polish, and an indie films ‘rough and ready’ vibes. Theres decent CGI across the runtime, but theres almost no risks taken here. The creative vision for this piece is seemingly ‘My horror DVD Stack 2006-2014’ and thats about it. Theres nothing attempted here that hasnt been done a hundred times over in better and bolder productions.
The cines washed out, murky and sludgey. shots are well composed, but again, theres nothing here to put me on the edge of my seat, nothing to make me take notice and nothing to really create a sense of suspense. Its just…by the numbers in a very unremarkable way, even the sequence buildings overly safe and remeniscent of films 10 years its senior…its kind of wild really.
The performances are all pretty mixed to passable, noone goofs, but the absolute best performances here, are just kind of half decent. they dont really work a good emotional range, they dont come across as naturalistic, the dialogue seems ill fitting to them and the physical acting isa mixed bag of ‘good’ to ‘static’…and thats kind of a problem.
Throw in an ultra generic score and large swathes of the film where the dialogue track is mixed too low, meaning subtitles had to be used. And the end result is a film that aimed low, landed in mediocre and lost a HUGE chunk of goodwill from me with a plot twist that landed like a Squit in the paddling pool. One I could see being an easier riffer with beer and good company, ABSOLUTELY NOT one to seek out, and certainly not worth going out of your way for…

Oh…oh no…oh dear. What fresh hell is this? After a 6 year absence from screens large or small, the Hellraiser franchise returned with a 9th entry, and so the story goes, *Allegedly* this was a bit of a rush release. Miramax and Dimension had planned to do a *Proper* big budget remake of the original ‘Hellraiser’ and preproduction was long underway, when they realised that their license to the IP was set to imminently expire. So the story goes that for $100,000, and 2-3 weeks filming allowance, they hashed out a rough and ready ‘Hellraiser’ movie in order to keep within their licensing agreements for the IP, to buy them time to make the movie they ACTUALLY wanted to make in a couple years time.
The results? A movie so bizarre in its execution it makes ‘The Room’ seem functional, and so poorly produced, the app I was watching this on bricked 6 minutes off the end as an act of digital Seppuku…I had to finish the movie via my fucking telephone.
The plot? is a non linear mix of found footage and ‘in the moment’ storytelling. As we follow two teens ‘Steven’ and ‘Nico’ as they sneak off from their respective families for a hedonistic bender weekend in Mexico. Unfortunately; things go a bit squiffy when Steven somehow gets hold of the Lament configuration, and summons demons from hell who tear his soul apart…
We then flash forward to the families of Steven and Nico who have arranged a special dinner together to try and raise their spirits as its been several weeks since their sons were last seen…However; it isnt working. Largely because Nicos mother is obsessed with watching the video footage captured by her son of their Mexican escape constantly, in the hopes of closure, or as a compulsion…or maybe both.
The only items recovered from the scene of the boys dissapearence was a camcorder, and the puzzle box. and for most of the first act, we flash back and forward between the, at times tense family dinner, as its revealed that Stevens sister Emma has sneakily viewed the camcorder footage against her parents wishes and has found the puzzle box and become…weirdly obsessed with it. and the camcorder footage itself. Revealing that Steven and Nico had a chance encounter with a girl at a bar, and while absolutely wrecked on tequila, an unknown event happened that led to the womans death…and shortly after ANOTHER encounter with a strange hobo, leads them to come into possession of the puzzlebox.
Things come to a head when Nico suddenly reappears at the start of the 2nd act, severely dehydrated and covered in blood. But somethings off, Nico is having terrible visions and isnt quite acting himself. and as Emma comes closer and closer to solving the puzzlebox…all the while getting…WEIRDLY horny about the whole thing…revelations will hit the families that will tear WAY more than just their souls apart.
And up front, I need to be clear, this is a cheap, CHEAP movie. There isnt a single facet of this production where the low budget nature of the whole thing is glaringly apparent, from scripts to costumes, direction to grading to effects. There isnt a single thing here that looks like it had the backing of a studio behind it..and given this is a studio produced picture of a much beloved and deeply malnourished franchise…I find that quite wild, but not unsurprising.
The script is probably this films strongest element, I liked that they introduced a found footage element to the franchise, and while its incredibly hit and miss and pretty much entirely abandoned by the end of the first act, at least they tried? I guess??? Being honest, the script reads and feels as if the writer, up until the final deadline was given to him, had never even HEARD of ‘Hellraiser’ and to correct that, he watched the first one and went ‘Ah right. okay’ and just…lifted half a dozen references from the first movie and transplanted them into this one. and that runs across the visual notes of this film as well as the plot lines.
A lot of the story is geared more towards the ‘hornier’ elements present in ‘Hellraiser’ 1 and 2. but its all without context, all without the grounding needed to make it make sense. The original two films understood that pain and pleasure are narrow margins and the cenobites arnt intrinsically a ‘pain only’ crowd. This film by contrast feels like a skinimax horror movie at times, something you’d be embarrissed to have your parents catch you watching, whether sex was on screen or not.
A lot of my goodwill to the script largely goes to the fact that for only the 2nd time in 11 years, we have a Hellraiser film that isnt just an investigator trying to piece together what the cenobites are. The final act in which all the dirty details from both sides of the family and whats ACTUALLY happened while the boys are missing is fun in a goofy way, but much like ‘Hellworld’ I was just left by the end of this wondering how we fell so far, so fast and so hard. Its depressing.
The pacings all over the place, the film is non linear for about a third of the runtime, which means we end up jumping all over the place, with some moments being purposfully slowburn, but at the wrong times, and other moments being WAY too quick making us miss valuble information as to whats going on. The act structuring is VERY heavy handed, they might as well have act cards for how blatently they tell the audience that ‘thats enough of that!’
The characters are all SUPER underwritten, ‘generic american in theatrical production’ is about as advanced as we get, and critically non of their development is earned or built up. This is a film where stuff just kind of happens, and the audience is just expected to go along with it.
And the dialogue…oh god, its only JUST better than ‘The Room’ but its SO dry and stiff, it makes some Asylum pictures look studio grade. its truely awful.
Most importantly of all, the film fails to capture any real sense of menace, terror or fear. Its a wallpaper movie. something that just ticks over in the background, that you forget is even running until the unbalanced end credits blow your speakers out 72 minutes after hitting play. The horror element is non existent, there is no ‘ethereal’ vibe to this production, and once again the cenobites as characters have been totally nuked from ‘Pseudo demi gods from another dimension built off of pain and pleasure who feed on the eternal suffering of those damned enough to find their box’ to ‘scary man who lives in a box who wants to hurt you.’ AND once again we get no real diversity in cenobites, with Pinhead once again remaining the constant, and the other cenobites being ANOTHER variation of ‘Chatterer’ and another eyeless, smooth cenobite.
The direction looks worse than DTV, its shot like a home shopping channel infomercial. its too bright, too well lit, too colourful and too naturalistic. The cenobites realm looks designer…and that REALLY shouldnt be the case.
The cine too is just…painfully out of synch with what the film needed, very flat profile, very little variation, no experimentation, complimented by horrible overuse of CGI, bad makeup and costumes, and a terrible colour grade that makes everything feel cheap and tacky. It looks like an Asylum knock off for about 90% of the movie. and the edits just as bad, Im pretty sure they couldnt figure out a good running order for how the found footage interacted with the ‘present day’ footage, so they just appear to have…rammed it all together as best a fit as they could and called it a day. Because why reshoot or bother with B-roll and cutaways when we know up front this is an IP retention exercise?!
The performances are frankly dire, most of the cast would rival the Sterling entertainment stable in terms of their acting ability, overly dry, totally unbelievable line deliveries of creaky dialogue, poor physicality. The cenobites look like they’ve had too much baking powder added to them while they were in the oven. they dont move with menace, they over emote, and scenes that are supposed to have a ‘seductive’ and ‘malevolent’ take to them left me crying with laughter for how badly handled they were. I can say hand on heart that every performer in this failed to sell me on their acting ability, or their characters.
And the soundtracks bad too, it sounds almost entirely composed of library tracks, badly cut in, badly timed and mixed higher than the dialogue for the most part making it difficult to hear whats being said. BUT! as a counter to that, they also didnt properly audio balance on set. Meaning screams and other loud noises clearly peak MULTIPLE times leading to a horrendous ‘hot’ sound on the mic…which…again, this is a STUDIO picture…HOW?!
Surprisingly; ‘Hellraiser: Revelations’ NARROWLY avoids being the worst ‘Hellraiser’ movie ever made, I think that honour still goes to ‘Deader’ because, while this film has a poorly constructed script, bad direction and cine, poor performances and a bad score and poor audio recording and mixing. Its plot has at least vaguely funny moments from a cringe or ‘So bad its good’ perspective. it at least has points where I sat there with my jaw on the floor at just how BAD it really truely was…Deader was just boring…or rather, I came away from this film kind of bemused at what i’d just seen and wondering how ANYONE even BEGAN to think this was a good idea…I came away from ‘Deader’ wishing i’d not wasted my time.
All this to say, Hellraiser: Revelations isnt very good, in fact, its pretty awful. but if you have a taste for bad movies. I think you may…DEEP…DEEP within the guts of this thing, find at least a couple crumbs to cling to…but why youd watch it based on that advertisement…I have no idea.
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/hellraiser-revelations/