
The first ‘Hellraiser’ film to not involve Clive Barker (the studio actually BANNED him from having any input on this film), the first ‘Hellraiser’ film NOT to be released in theaters, and from here on in, im on ‘first time viewings’ till the end of this franchise. All I knew about ‘Hellraiser: Inferno’ was that it featured cops trailing some ‘bizzare murders’ I figured; ‘Well; that cant be all bad!’…By the way, have you seen any of David Finchers movies between 1995 and 2000?…just checking…
‘Hellraiser: Inferno’ is the first (but certainly NOT the last) entry into this franchise to be heavily rumoured to be a retroactive ‘refit’ of a script stuck in development hell. The rumour goes that the Weinsteins hired a writer, who took an old rejected supernatural cop script HEAVILY inspired by ‘Se7en’, but changed…whatever supernatural element was supposed to be in THAT script to Cenobites and the lament configuration, and…they threw in a good dose of ‘Fight Club’ to the mix as well because…hey why not? its the year 2000 baybeeeeee
The result is a film that comes across like a poor mans attempt at Fincher with an uncanny vally degree of ‘Freddys Nightmares’ thrown into the mix. and I absolutely did NOT gel with it one bit.
The plot centers around Joseph, a dirty DIRTY cop. Josephs charming, charismatic, good at magic tricks and one of the forces best and brightest. But Joseph is also both a coke user and a dealer, he’s totally open to framing people to make himself look good and get himself out of trouble, and he’s addicted to cheating on his Wife (whome he has a daughter with) with sex workers…largely for the buzz, playing it off as him working late at the station and paying them in cash and crack stolen from crime scenes. Joseph thinks he’s too smart to get caught, as he balances the line between excess and debauchery, while not going SO far as to go full on overt and get caught.
But things are about to change for Joseph, as; when attending a gory and gruesome crime scene, he stumbles across two things, a mysterious puzzlebox, and a candle with a childs finger encased in it.
The case stays with him through the night…But doesnt bother him so much that he wont head out to spend the night getting coked up with a sex worker. After ‘finishing’, he hits the bathroom and starts messing around with the puzzle box, which opens, and briefly transports him to a world of nightmarish visions. After which he awakens on the bathroom floor, heads to bed, and the next day heads into the station.
But while warming up for the day, Joseph recieves a call from the motel he stayed at last night, its the sex worker pleading for him to come and save her because someones after her. At which point she gives a blood curdling scream and the phone goes dead. Both Joseph and his partner Tony head to the motel, where they find the woman carved up and bolted onto the bathroom wall. Joseph begs Tony to cover with him, and confesses that he was there that night.
Tony reluctantly agrees. But this sends Joseph down a deep and dark path. As a suspect known only as ‘The Engineer’ makes his presence known. At first, Joseph is warned off pusuing this, with a warning that, if he ‘hunts for The Engineer, The Engineer will hunt for you’ But Joseph is the best cop in town! he’ll crack the case lickety split surely!…surley not…as the bodycount rises and Joseph ends up way in over his head. he’s led into a realm of demons, torture and debauchery as he tries to get to the bottom of the killers motive, without finding himself on the hit list.
Its heavily refuted that this is a recycled rejected script retrofitted to be a Hellraiser vehical…But in many ways, i’d be more forgiving of it if it was. Because, this quite literally does just feel like a direct to video knock off of ‘Se7en’ with a dash of ‘Fight Club’ and ‘Freddys Nightmares’ thrown in for good measure.
Probably one of the biggest complaints I see regularly is that ‘Pinhead’ is barely even in this movie. And I think thats a fair critique, but thats the least of this films worries really, honestly; I thought it was kind of refreshing and interesting to reframe the series in this way, having a cop stumble onto the site of one of the Cenobites victims and then slowly, they piece together whats happening from various crime scenes, before being compelled into hunting the box down for themselves. That sounds like it could have been fun!
This movie though…is NOT fun. its very VERY cheap for the most part and I feel largely focusses on the wrong things. Rather than a horror cop drama with subtext and coded messaging. We instead get a character piece, where we’re stuck with a deeply unlikable character getting more and more unlikable as the runtime goes on, barely even really dealing with the cenobites or the nature of the crime scenes, until the final 10 or so minutes (with notable exception) when the Cenobites just randomly turn up, explain the whole movie, and then leave again.
Theres way too much focus on Josephs personal life, on the world he’s built for himself and his own ostracization. To the point that, when the Cenobites DO turn up in dribs and drabs, it feels like i’ve accidentally swapped movies for a couple of minutes. They feel SO out of place in this movie, i’d have rather it just been ghosts or non descript demons than trying to ‘square peg in a round hole’ it as they’ve tried here.
The pacings glacial, it moves at a crawl, with the plot largely just being Joseph plus 1-2 other people standing or sitting in a room lore dropping till we can get to a Cenobite scene or a change of location…But you better no be interested in HEARING any of this script, because other than Doug Bradley, who actually DOES ennunciate his lines here, the rest of the cast are TERRIBLE mumblers…and as my bluray for this one didnt contain a subtitle track…I pretty much have NO idea what was said for about 70% of the runtime.
Tonally, it wants to be a dark and gritty cop drama, but the budget wont stretch to decent effects and heavy gore, which means all the gore shots have to either be heavily distorted or obscured. They also seemingly couldnt find an actress with a ‘nudity’ exception in her contract, because the one sex scene in the film is fully clothed and heavily filtered. Basically, it feels like someone commissioned a ‘Hellraiser’ film, and then ACTUALLY WATCHED a ‘Hellraiser’ film and realised that they ABSOLUTELY DID NOT want to make a new Hellraiser film, because it was a sin. So they then moved heaven and earth to SOMEHOW create a ‘sanitized’ take on ‘Hellraiser’…and its bizarre. I’ve never seen a film so desperate to fight against what its supposed to be.
The characters are poorly structured, they dont feel naturalistic at all, and some of their decisions in this script are just downright stupid; probably the most glaring example is Joseph reciving the call from the sex worker being murdered, visiting the motel and THEN realising that it looks like he killed her…despite the fact that…even in the year 2000, most police stations recorded incoming calls, and that CCTV was INCREDIBLY prominant even then, so he would have had MORE than an alibi to prove he didnt kill her…but he acts in this film like he’d be getting the death penalty for all this…and thats just one glaring example out of dozens I spotted across the runtime that just…made me think the movie was kind of stupid and rushed script wise.
The directions fine enough, Scott Derrikson was clearly a Fincher fan as this film reeks of ‘Se7en’ on a directoral standpoint. It looks nice enough, even if the CGI is creaky as hell in the year of our lord 2025…I’ll take a poor mans take on Fincher over uncoordinated any day. But its still kind of poor show that the best the director can do with a picture is just ape a VERY popular film makers style and hope enough people get on board with it.
Cast directions taken a page from Fincher too, but here I think its very well handled…arguably the best aspect of this production…if only they’d got the cast to read their lines at a volume that I could actually HEAR what was being said, i’d probably have an even greater appreciation for it.
The cine is fine, it looks cheap. it looks REALLY cheap…but its fine. I think my only big hangup with this one is the design of the Cenobites. we have 4 new Cenobites in this film, and all of them have pretty much the same facial design…basically a tweak on ‘Chatterers’ design, but with different body shapes. It also looks like they managed to find the old ‘Chatterer’ makeup prosthetics, becuase his head is back on a legless body for a few scenes, and its all kind of iffy. Now, I will say they mercifully only use CG sparingly to enhance the practical effects. My rating would have been even lower had they gone for purely CG cenobites. But the lack of diversity in design is just really kind of a bummer…
Other than that though, its shot to look like a TV movie/direct to video feature. You can clearly see the inspriations behind the compositional choices, but the fact remains that the budget is REALLY struggling to match the vision here, and there are several moments that really made me just feel like this film was coasting on fumes.
The edit is a bit of a mixed bag too, It was the age where horror films relied on ‘flash cuts’ to create a sense of horror and jumpscares. and when they do that, the film curdles like sour milk. the 2000s style horror editing here is rancid. it looks and feels terrible…but when its not trying to do that. I think its pretty passable for the most part. Plenty of B-roll, good enough pacing, and sequences breath…maybe a little too much for their own good, but I’d rather something have stretch room than feel like its been chopped to within and inch of its life.
The performances are…not the best, Craig Sheffer as Joseph is probably the strongest character here, but he’s essentially jsut playing a charicature of the charismatic, wise cracking cop trope thats now commonplace in series like ‘CSI’ and ‘Law and order’. He gives it a good crack and his ‘fear’ moments are genuinely impressive…Its just a shame that he gets so little in the way of range, and that I cant tell a bloody word he’s saying.
Doug Bradly is probably second best here, returning as ‘Pinhead’ for all of 5 minutes, his makeup once again takes a hit, after they just about ‘nailed’ it in ‘Bloodline’…they dont really modify his voice either. But they do give him an intimidating presence, and the time he’s on screen is arguably some of the best.
But good lord, the soundtrack. is. HORRENDOUS. at times it feels like Sterling entertainment and full moon offcuts…the kind of music they wouldnt use in THEIR movies. GONE is the orchestral ‘real’ instrument pieces and instead its midi samples and stock music…and it utterly throws the vibe of the movie entirely, I hated it. With a more impactful score, this probably could have been somewhat salvagable…but as it is? it sucks SO bad…
‘Hellraiser: Inferno’ had promise…as mentioned, I could see the core premise of this movie ACTUALLY being kind of fun. But it feels like they really lost their way on this one at some point in pre-production and what should have been a ‘Hellraiser’ film from a Cops perspective, became a ‘Cop’ film that just so happened to have demons in it…I really didnt care for this one, it’ll likely be a while before I revisit it. Cant recommend it, its cheap, boring and lacking all the bite, vibe and aesthetic that made the series great in the first place. ‘Hellbound’ is now but a distant memory…
source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/hellraiser-inferno/








