Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA hideously ugly witch casts spells on her victims which turns their insides into snakes and worms.A hideously ugly witch casts spells on her victims which turns their insides into snakes and worms.A hideously ugly witch casts spells on her victims which turns their insides into snakes and worms.
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A handsome conman named Gu Bausheng charms his way into the family that owns the "Lucky Hotel". Once he's all settled in, he lets his true sleazy personality rise to the surface, and treats everybody like garbage, including his lovely new wife, Shueh Li. After the death of a family member, others implore "Auntie" to loose a "tame head curse" upon the evil Gu Bausheng.
"Xie Mo" (known as "The Devil" in North America) gets off to a great start, as it unleashes unholy atmosphere and gross-out moments upon the viewer with a vengeance. Its best moments are filmed using garish red and green colour schemes, and characters develop abscesses all over their body, and are made to vomit up all manner of slithering creatures: snakes, worms, centipedes, etc.
There's so much fun horror of the nasty kind here that it makes it worth sitting through the whole film, although to be honest there's also a lot of set-up and melodrama. Writer Po Sheng Lu and director Jen-Chieh Chang take their time telling the story, showing us the effects of this newcomers' presence on the hotel grounds. There are signs that all is not right, as one angry man claims that Gu is not who he says he is. There is also one incredibly annoying child character, the aptly named "Ding Dong", who's a nuisance almost every time he shows up. Other performances range from acceptable to pretty cheesy; the dialogue (or, at least, the English subtitles) can be quite amusing as well.
If the viewer can patiently wait through the more story and character-oriented material, they'll be rewarded with some of the most wonderfully gruesome splatter that they can see in a film of this type. In fact, it's interesting how the filmmakers try to reconcile all the lighter and sillier moments with the horror that they create. The show-stopping special effects by Cheng Yu Feng are the highlight.
In the end, we're provided with a little bit of exposition, although it's not as if we can't figure out most of this stuff on our own.
"The Devil" is a slimy, worm-ridden delight if one has the stomach for it.
Seven out of 10.
"Xie Mo" (known as "The Devil" in North America) gets off to a great start, as it unleashes unholy atmosphere and gross-out moments upon the viewer with a vengeance. Its best moments are filmed using garish red and green colour schemes, and characters develop abscesses all over their body, and are made to vomit up all manner of slithering creatures: snakes, worms, centipedes, etc.
There's so much fun horror of the nasty kind here that it makes it worth sitting through the whole film, although to be honest there's also a lot of set-up and melodrama. Writer Po Sheng Lu and director Jen-Chieh Chang take their time telling the story, showing us the effects of this newcomers' presence on the hotel grounds. There are signs that all is not right, as one angry man claims that Gu is not who he says he is. There is also one incredibly annoying child character, the aptly named "Ding Dong", who's a nuisance almost every time he shows up. Other performances range from acceptable to pretty cheesy; the dialogue (or, at least, the English subtitles) can be quite amusing as well.
If the viewer can patiently wait through the more story and character-oriented material, they'll be rewarded with some of the most wonderfully gruesome splatter that they can see in a film of this type. In fact, it's interesting how the filmmakers try to reconcile all the lighter and sillier moments with the horror that they create. The show-stopping special effects by Cheng Yu Feng are the highlight.
In the end, we're provided with a little bit of exposition, although it's not as if we can't figure out most of this stuff on our own.
"The Devil" is a slimy, worm-ridden delight if one has the stomach for it.
Seven out of 10.
- Hey_Sweden
- 18 de out. de 2020
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