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The Package
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The StoryMiddle
aged Ben is driving through the desert with his girlfriend Nicky and K.T., his
daughter. Ben stops his station
wagon by a car at the side of the road...and immediately regrets his actions,
as the car is filled with newly massacred corpses!
He races to the nearest town, but is nearly killed by an inexplicably
hostile mob of people, and so drives off into the desert with his daughter and
girlfriend in tow--they doesn’t get very far, however, before a little girl
standing in the middle of the road forces their car onto the shoulder, where it
stalls. Thus Ben, Nicky and K.T.
find themselves with no choice but to walk back to the town they just vacated. In
that town weird things are afoot. The
community’s elders spend the night attending a weird satanic gathering
presided over by Duncan, the town doctor.
Many of the town’s children, meanwhile, have gotten together to
torment and/or kill their parents in freaky ways involving creepy dolls.
It seems that for the past day or so the area has been plagued with
suspicious murders and nobody has been able to leave.
Ben
and his family, re-entering the town, find themselves caught up in the madness
when Ben’s daughter K.T. disappears. He
and Nicky join forces with the town sheriff and priest to take on the Satanic
forces besieging the area. Said
forces have been bequeathed by Dr. Duncan, who it seems wants to transport the
spirits of himself and his fellow Satanists into the bodies of the town’s
children. Will our heroes be able
to intervene in time? |
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The DirectionIf
style were enough to guarantee a successful product then THE BROTHERHOOD OF
SATAN would be a prime example of such--and for its first half it is, so much so that I was willing to overlook the half-baked
screenplay, with its severely underdeveloped storyline, chaotic viewpoint
shifts and countless loose ends. Bernard
McEveety displays an extremely sure hand directorially, helming with confidence
and real style. So assured are
McEveety’s visuals that much of the narrative is related without dialogue
(which is not always a good thing, as the loopy storyline would have benefited
from a bit more explanation). |
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Vital StatisticsTHE
BORTHERHOOD OF SATAN (a.k.a. COME IN, CHILDREN) |
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