Despite appreciating horror very much (with a lot of classic ones out there, such as 'Halloween', 'Nightmare on Elm Street', 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre', 'Night of the Living Dead' and 'The Exorcist', plus the best of Hammer House of Horror),even if not my favourite genre, it took me a while to get round to watching the 'Hellraiser' franchise. Due to having so much to watch and review, and the list keeps getting longer and longer.
The film that started the franchise off is not only for me by far the best of the 'Hellraiser' films it also for me, and quite a few others it seems, is one of the stronger horror films of the 80s, though not quite of all time. What is meant by being by far the best of the 'Hellraiser' films is that it is the only one to be above very good, the nine sequels were very variable (leaning towards the disappointing) and the latter films particularly are suggestive of the franchise having run its course.
Found the second film to be by far the best of the sequels and tthird and fourth films to be watchable if problematic. It was with 'Hellraiser: Inferno' when the franchise took a turn for the worse, though much worse followed this. 'Hellraiser: Inferno' is actually one of the better post-'Hellraiser: Bloodline'.
'Hellraiser: Inferno' does have good things. If there is anything that is quite a bit better than 'Hell on Earth' and especially 'Bloodline' it is the acting in crucial roles, which by 'Hellraiser' sequels standards was not bad. Craig Sheffer was a decent lead and James Remar is solid in his role too. Cannot say anything bad about Doug Bradley who is still genuinely frightening in the little screen time he has.
It also doesn't look too awful, some atmospheric scenery, above average effects, unsettling enough photography. The film begins very well, being suitably creepy. It at least makes sense too and there is a nice unnerving atmosphere.
On the other hand, like others have said, one of the biggest problems is that it doesn't feel like a 'Hellraiser' film. Feeling more like a psychological/mystery/thriller with Pinhead and the Cenobites being thrown in in an afterthought fashion. This is further accentuated by that they are in the film far too little, they do work very well (as proven in the original) when mysterious and like catalysts rather than heavily focused on, and have next to nothing to do when they do appear. Pinhead's contribution is very memorable and he is still deserving of his horror icon status but the Cenobites have lost their creepiness and come over as goofy instead.
As a film judged as a standalone, 'Hellraiser: Inferno' is problematic. The editing is a bit all over the place and the direction doesn't seem assured or in control or at ease with the material. The characters are underdeveloped clichés with unclear and sometimes frustrating motivations and the writing continues to be laughably bad and too heavily reliant on goofiness and camp that juxtaposes too much. The story does lack tension, suspense and any surprises, while there is far too much focus on the hallucinatory sequences which looked good but slowed down the film and that ambition, intelligence and creativity had disappeared almost completely by this point of the franchise and replaced by camp, predictability and schlock. What had potential to be a dark and unsettling film is let down by the above, lacking energy and that while not overusing the gore or horror elements it feels somewhat toned down. The ending is not an incoherent parody or anything but it did feel rushed to me and the music does not fit in either placement or tone.
To conclude, didn't do much for me but far from the worst of the series. 4/10 Bethany Cox
Hellraiser: Inferno
2000
Action / Crime / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
Hellraiser: Inferno
2000
Action / Crime / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
Plot summary
A shady police detective becomes embroiled in a strange world of murder, sadism and madness after being assigned a murder investigation against a madman known only as "The Engineer".
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Movie Reviews
An inferno that doesn't really explode
Barkerish
Denver police Det. Joseph Thorne (Craig Sheffer) has a dark side. His newest case is the murder of a loner former classmate who got picked on by him and his friends. He finds the puzzle box among the belongings. He solves the box and the Cenobites appear. As he investigates further, he is pulled into a dark world searching for a sadistic opponent called The Engineer.
The best compliment I can give this straight to DVD movie is that it reminds me of Clive Barker. It has the leather S&M hypersexual monster designs. It has a flawed hard boiled detective protagonist. It has the nightmarish vision. It's directed by fresh-faced Scott Derrickson who would go on to bigger, better things. This is a really nice stepping stone. The only misstep is a side trip to cowboy country. It doesn't fit the general motif. Overall, this is an intriguing stab at a fading franchise by someone who obviously has a vision. Despite the lower budget, there are some interesting artistic attempts. It does take too many trips into the nightmare world when the only thing I want from Thorne is real investigating. I need him to be the chess master from the introduction.
A Horror Movie About A man Fighting Against His Demons
Detective Joseph Thorne (Craig Sheffer) is a dirty cop and a lousy son, husband and father. One day, while investigating a crime, he finds the cube, the gateway to Pinhead and the Cenobites. Then, a lot of horrible crimes and strange situations will haunt him. A surprising end shows him that he is `paying for bill'. Only yesterday I decided to watch this movie. Most of the specialized critics have written that this is a bad movie etc. I disagree: of course the viewer must not compare it with the Clive Baker's Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II, which are masterpieces in the horror genre. However, this movie, about a man fighting against his demons, is indeed a good horror movie. The fans of this type of movie will not certainly be disappointed. My vote is seven.