Upsidedown Cross
Upsidedown Cross
NR | 25 September 2014 (USA)
Upsidedown Cross Trailers

Abandoned, abused by the police and in the throes of withdrawal, Nadine, a drug addicted young prostitute, returns to her childhood home and the mother she ran away from. Nadine's mother, Delilah; a fanatical Christian who believes demons have possessed her daughter, searches for a "cure" for Nadine's erratic behavior. When she finds a rogue preacher willing to exorcise her daughter for a fee, neither realizes they have invited the devil into their home. While her mother turns a blind eye to the bizarre practices unfolding in her own home, Nadine, racked with mental and physical pain, has no choice but to put up with the preacher's increasingly violent charade.

Reviews
Laikals

The greatest movie ever made..!

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FrogGlace

In other words,this film is a surreal ride.

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Mehdi Hoffman

There's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.

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Scotty Burke

It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review

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Michael Ledo

Nadine (Erin Russ) has a fairly easy life, laying around nude while guys take Polaroids of her. She gets her drugs and all is well until she goes beyond the norm and now she is back at home with an overly religious mother who believes her daughter is possessed. She spends her last dime on a donation to eliminate a demon or two in Nadine who is faking it.The film was low budget with background noise in the film. David Yow as the preacher was not convincing and had scenes that lasted way to long with boring religious talk. Erin Russ had a grown Wednesday Addams (Lisa Loring) look to her. The opening starts off with a bang, with erotic scenes and then dies.2 stars for the nudity Guide: F-word, sex, nudity (Erin Rus

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Woodyanders

Weary and strung-out drug addict prostitute Nadine (a strong and fearless performance by Erin Russ) goes home to her gullible and delusional religious kook mother Delilah (well played by Colleen Cohan) seeking a place to crash so she can kick her habit. However, Delilah believes that Nadine has the devil within her, so she hires a shady, yet zealous rogue priest (a marvelously intense and unnerving portrayal by David Yow) to exorcise the evil spirits from Nadine's body and thereby save her soul.Director William Hellfire, who also co-wrote the hard-hitting script with Mike Hunchback, artfully uses a simple and claustrophobic style that puts a potent emphasis on mood and characters over cheap scares and crass exploitative thrills, does an expert job of maintaining an extremely dark, bleak, and despairing tone, grounds the gripping premise in a plausibly sordid workaday reality, and offers a bold and provocative exploration of religious fanaticism and hypocrisy (the priest only provides his holy services after Delilah gives him a generous donation first). The stark presentation of the priest as a dangerous and duplicitous charlatan rates as its greatest and most impressive coup: This is the type of cunning and dastardly fellow who cruelly twists and distorts religion for his own vile selfish ends and, alas, exists all around us in everyday life. Moreover, the fact that Nadine isn't completely sympathetic adds an additional admirable element of challenging complexity to the whole sticky situation. A very difficult and disturbing picture for sure, but still quite powerful and praiseworthy just the same.

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