The Demon Murder Case
The Demon Murder Case
| 06 March 1983 (USA)
The Demon Murder Case Trailers

A young boy is taken over by demons who force him to commit murder.

Reviews
Inclubabu

Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.

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Dynamixor

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

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Taraparain

Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.

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Bea Swanson

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Leofwine_draca

I'd never heard of this one before (I soon found out why) but the cover looked exciting (yep, I'm a sucker for any drawings of monsters). As I rewound the tape in my VCR (don't you hate people who don't bother rewinding their videotapes?) it made a horrible clanking/screeching sound, which led me to believe the VCR had somehow become possessed by the demon from the film. I think the VCR was just annoyed at having to rewind such a mediocre film though.This film sorely loses out by being a TV movie, as the format is too restricting for this kind of film. What starts off as a standard rip-off of that granddaddy demonic possession film, THE EXORCIST, develops into something else. The signs of the rip-off are all there; the boy even screams "it burns!" when he is sprayed with holy water during an exorcism (Regan anyone?). Kevin Bacon takes on the role of Jason Miller, begging the demon to fight him instead. However it then turns into a court case, which is a fairly interesting premise, of whether a court will allow Bacon to walk free after he stabs his girlfriend's employer after claiming he was demonically possessed. The last third of the film is concerned with this case, a wraparound affair. Unfortunately, far too much time is spent on the events building up to the stabbing, and it seems to drag on relentlessly. I'll leave the ending for you to find out.The film tries hard to be scary, and the child actor is fairly convincing in his possession scenes. However when he describes the Beast as wearing a shirt and "ripped jeans" this quickly throws all credibility out of the window. The rest of the cast is generally made up of bland, middle-aged or old actors, which doesn't help. Kevin Bacon does acquit himself well in his early role as the everyday guy who ends up combating evil.The film contains no special effects, apart from a few camera tricks during the possession and the age-old levitation scene. It's an interesting film, but it suffers from being too bland, too timid in its portrayal of evil, having a dull assortment of characters, and being too derivative of the miles better classic which inspired it. No wonder it's a forgotten film and Kevin Bacon doesn't mention it too often in public.

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dgallag114

I lived in the apartment this murder took place in. It was not located in Rhode Island, it was located in Brookfield, Connecticut. I used to study the Black Arts and left my black book of 72 demons in the attic without the pentagram of soloman on it for protection.The movie set was fashioned after that apartment and there was a pet motel right next to it. It is still there. You can recognize the building by looking at it from the back.If the murder took place in Brookfield and there was demonic involvement. The Book of Soloman may have had something to do with it. I remember when it happened, it was publicised as the first murder ever in Brookfield.Dan Gallagher

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