This is a movie that either did not hook you with the preview or you missed hearing about it altogether. If so, then the joke is on you.
I’ll admit that the preview didn’t do much for me. In fact, after seeing this movie, I can say that the trailer does not provide a very good basis for what the movie is like. However, it did leave me curious, curious enough to seek it out and watch it.
I don’t know why, but I really like movies that look like they were shot in the 80’s or 90’s. There is something about them that is…comforting, almost novel in a way. The House of the Devil felt very 80’s, and rightfully so. In fact, now that I think about it, The House of the Devil was delightfully 80’s and I loved it.
First of all, this movie isn’t about gore or quick and sudden scares. This movie was all about suspense, a slow building suspense and impending sense of doom. Creepy is probably the right word. The film follows a college student, Samantha Hughes, who is in desperate need of funds to pay the first month’s rent on her new place. She finds a babysitting ad on campus and, essentially, the movie begins.
Samantha and her friend Megan drive out into the country to a large and isolated farm house where the babysitting job will take place. There, they find Mr. & Mrs. Ulman, an elderly couple that lives in the house. The creepy vibe takes on a slow pulse at this point in the movie due to the fact that Mr. Ulman is freakishly tall. Not to mention, Mr. Ulman tells Samantha that they actually do not have a child and would like her to take care of their elderly and ailing mother. Suspicious right? Well, Mr. Ulman is quite the snake and manages to present a believable case for his lie. Plus, Samantha is a starving and money hungry college student, so the offer goes up and she decides to stick around.
Anyway, Megan leaves her friend behind to a quiet night with the TV, pizza, and a satanic demon. Speaking of the whole Satanic aspect of the movie; what I liked best is that we (the audience) know all, while Samantha, knows nothing. That is basic horror and suspense 101, but this movie does something unique, either unique or completely lifted from actual movies filmed in the 80’s. Either way, I liked it. Most of her time at the house is spent doing nothing, as in calling Megan, ordering pizza, flipping on the TV, and popping in a cassette to dance to around the magnificently huge and seemingly abandoned and haunted farmhouse. What would an 80’s movie, or Quasi-80’s movie be without an 80’s carefree jam and dance session with the headphones on?
The last ten minutes of the movie are similar to the division of wealth in America. The smallest percent is getting all the action. I’ll put it this way: If you go into this movie having seen the trailer, then you will at least have the gist of what is about to go down. However, if you watch this movie willy-nilly, no trailers or synopsis or anything, then you will be wondering what is going on for the first 80% of the time. You will know that something ominous is afoot, but there won’t really be a good clue until the latter half, which brings me to my point. Everything is revealed in the last ten or fifteen minutes. It’s like being paralyzed from the waist down most of your life, then on your 75th birthday, bursting out of your wheelchair and doing the 100 yard hurdles through a half a mile of an active war zone. The tone completely changes in a split second. During this shift I’m speaking of, both we, the audience, and Samantha, are on the same playing field. We all know just as much as the other. Another great thing about this movie was that the villains were so real. They were involved in a satanic cult and sick in the head, kind of.
I recommend this movie because I enjoyed it. Watching it in the dark even proved quite challenging, leading me too do that thing where I don’t look at the screen, but look through it like I’m spacing out. I can’t say that I would take a babysitting job like that with people like that in a place like that, being that I am a guy and parents tend to lean towards girls when choosing babysitters, but it is also because of the fact that I don’t trust anyone. Chances are that if I’m doing so much as meeting a stranger off of Craigslist to buy a mountain bike, I’ll carry a pair of scissors in my pocket. Not those child’s safety scissors either, the real deal. I am extremely paranoid though.
If you had the chance to see a movie like The Strangers, then I would give this one a shot. They’ve both got that eerily suspenseful feeling and audio that allows you to hear the pad of each footstep and cackle of the fireplace. They really give you that sense of quiet and solidarity that one feels when completely alone. Check it out.
Rosemary’s Baby. Just sayin’.





