When some scientists and college students decide to take their
teachings and studies to another level after being given information by a
priest (The legendary Donald Pleasance, Halloween) about a mysterious green
liquid being stored in vat they jump at the chance at finding out its
significance. Once they all get set up in the church with various devices that
assist in detecting any sort of activity they become trapped by a horde of psychotic
homeless people led by rock icon Alice Cooper.
Once they discover the outside threat, the inside threat of the green
liquid rears its ugly head and soon some of the students become demonic zombies
pent on getting an incredible evil from an alternate world (Hell?) to take
over. The Prince of Darkness plays very effectively with much of the same tools and single location terror that Assault on Precinct 13 and Night of the Living Dead used several years
earlier. Carpenter basically does it again here; just with zombie, demons,
flesh-eating beetles and killer hobos.
The extras features on the disc are an absolute blast. There are a few quality interviews of note - John Carpenter is on hand for the featurette Sympathy for the Devil, actor Robert Grasmere, composer Alan Howarth and one the best reasons to buy this release, a very enjoyable interview with rock icon Alice Cooper. Cooper's role was originally just supposed to be small until Carpenter decided he wanted him to be the leader of the homeless people. The singer seems to have loved his time on the film and has a great appreciation for the director.
Carpenter generally puts together very solid commentaries, and
he's back with a nice mixture of stories and technical insight with actor Peter
Jason. Both roll off each other very well. They say some nice about Victor Wong
even though they seemed puzzled by his eating habits. Definitely worth a listen
if you enjoyed the film.
The Prince of Darkness is a winner on Blu-ray and looks stunning
in high-def. I still think it's underappreciated and I hope fans can
re-discover this creepy, sinister little flick. I'm sure if you compare it to
Halloween and the near perfection that was created in 1978 you may feel that
way but on its own it's still one of the best horror films of the mid-80's. Highly Recommended
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