Jimmy Drankovitch and Sally Schermerhorn gasp at the military might of Satan.
Other demonic manifestations include smelly brown gunk that boils over on the stove, smelly white gunk that seeps out of the refrigerator and cabinets, and invisible hands that grope Louise in the kitchen one morning. She's terrified at first, but later she and Bill can joke about it. It might not be bad having another man around the house, hubby suggests, if he shares in the housework.
Louise: I'm not going to be molested day and night just so you don't have to take out the garbage.
Bill: Just tell him that rape, sex and molestation are my department.
Louise: ...He did have nice hands.
Satan also hits Louise in the leg with a stop-motion animated chair, sets Bill's newspaper on fire, and, in his ultimate stratagem, sends a hooded guy into the house with a knife. A timely combination of cross and revolver repel the intruder, but he's enough to convince them finally to quit the place so LaRue can cut to the voodoo. "Thus the oldest war in the universe carries on to its eternal conclusion," the narrator narrates to close this riveting empty film. It has a badness on every level that lends it a kind of inimitable authenticity. Too many people make self-consciously bad movies, but this kind of bad can't be faked. Satanwar doesn't seem to be very well known, but the GialloGrindhouse channel on YouTube is out to correct that, and you can watch Bart LaRue's definitive cinematic statement right here -- if you dare.
2 comments:
This was actually LaRue's second film. The first, THE ARK OF NOAH, was a biblical documentary filmed at Mt. Ararat in 1974. It premiered in Abilene, TX on August 13th, 1975 and played churches and select theaters around the country for the next 2 years before being sold off to TV.
I appreciate the correction, as I only had IMDB and Wikipedia to go by. Most likely Satanwar was distributed similarly before getting the VHS release from which the YouTube video was derived. But I can't imagine church audiences being thrilled with that "comical" dialogue I quoted.
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