Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Franchise Review: Hellraiser [V]: Inferno (2000)

 
Dudes, I really dig Craig Sheffer and I don't know why. Is it because he was in Nightbreed and that's awesome? Is it because he looks like David Boreanaz's long-lost brother? Whatever it is, I was really happy to see that he was in Hellraiser: Inferno, the fifth installment in the franchise. Inferno is a movie that seems to come way out of left field in the Hellraiser universe and still manages to work really, really well. It's definitely one of my favorite sequels so far, after the first one (the first sequel, that is, Hellraiser 2). Oh! Craig was also in a movie that I previously reviewed for Project Terrible - SyFy's Battledogs - and that was actually kinda awesome, so there's another reason to like him.

Detective Joseph Thorne (Sheffer) is a guy with a good heart, but bad habits. He avoids his family, cheats on his wife with prostitutes, and snorts coke. He comes upon the infamous puzzle box at a gruesome crime scene and when he unwittingly opens it like everyone else in this series does, he opens the door to a nightmarish world of crazy dream sequences and visits from otherworldly monsters, on top of several real-life murders for which he seems to be the prime suspect.

Like I said, Inferno is definitely the strangest of the Hellraiser movies so far, because it doesn't really feel like a part of the franchise's mythos directly. It has feelings of a movie like Seven, or just about any other movie about a grizzled city police detective who gets in too deep in the dark side of life and descends into madness. There are tie-ins to the universe of Hellraiser with the puzzle box, the Cenobites, and Pinhead, who sadly is only in the movie for a very short time close to the end. The tie-ins are loose but not exactly forced, because the movie is really only about Joseph, which is awesome and a great story. Pinhead, and Joseph's hellish experiences with the Cenobites, are used more as metaphors for the movie's underlying theme.

The filmmaking style from director Scott Derrickson, who also co-wrote the movie with Paul Harris Boardman, and who would go on to make kick-ass movies like The Exorcism of Emily Rose and Sinister, is greatly appreciated for a movie like Inferno, because he had the perfect idea for what this movie should look and feel like. There are no big set pieces or action sequences, no amazingly elaborate deaths that Hellraiser has come to be known for - and that's all okay. After a short time, I was able to stop wondering where Pinhead was and just focus on what they were showing me, and enjoying the message they were trying to deliver.

And what they were trying to say with this movie was actually very well thought and poignant. The child's fingers that are found at each crime scene, the strange child's room that Joseph keeps visiting in his dreams, the child's voice calling out to him for help - the audience slowly finds out that that was all Joseph. The final set up where Joseph is confronted with Pinhead (who was disguising himself as a psychiatrist - kinda weird, but I'll go with it) reveals that this is all about him being in his own personal hell, where he is slowly cutting away at his soul, because of his life choices and the people he has hurt. I like that. I especially like how at the end, he actually doesn't get a second chance to change things. It harkens back to Joseph's conversation with his partner Tony earlier in the movie about palindromes - the movie ends the same way it begins, with Joseph still in the hell of the life he has created for himself.

Of course, one could argue with me that all of this sucks because this is not what Pinhead and the Cenobites do in the Hellraiser world. Joseph opened the box, but instead of killing him, they just decide to mess with him? And okay, Pinhead only wants to torture people who want it, but I would say that subconsciously or more likely consciously, Joseph felt that he did need to be punished for what he has done in life and he hates the person he has become. And that is what Pinhead uses to bring him to hell - his own personal hell. Because of this, it's not hard to say that Inferno is a really good movie, and not just a good movie "for a Hellraiser sequel."

I guess I could go on longer and talk about the acting, the effects (which are also really good), the filming style (which completely sells the movie), and those freaky sexy Wire Twin Cenobites and the Half-Chatterer, but the story is really the highlight of Hellraiser: Inferno and is what makes the movie successful to me and one of my favorites of the franchise so far. This is stepping up the game for the rest you Hellraiser sequels, so you better follow through!

9 comments:

  1. was able to get one of the two Twin "ladies" ... sadly not the one with the 1/2 "Chatterer".....
    a really well written review , dear Lady....
    And an enjoyable film as well...

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  2. I originally hated this when I first saw it; probably cuz the previous sequels had it going like some sort of monster movie with some really cool villains and kills. The sudden story-driven shift of Inferno caught me off guard and I never knew what to think of it.

    But lately, I am starting to appreciate it more. I wouldn't say I love this entry to Hellraiser's DTV sequels (that love's reserved for Hellseeker and Hellworld) but it is respectable.

    Also, half-Chatterer's actually called "Torso". Not the most imaginative name but I hardly cared about him anyway...

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    1. But he's Chatterer and there's just half of him - "Torso" is too boring!

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  3. This movie and the next one weren't really "bad" per-say, but they felt like the series was looking for a direction and leaning towards just being an anthology with Pinhead showing up at the end to tie in.

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    1. No, they're not bad at all. Some of the best movies of the franchise so far.

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  4. This wasn't originally written as a part of the series, and indeed Pinhead and crew were added in a later draft to make it a sorta Hellraiser movie. I thought it was okay - but I didn't like it as much as you.

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  5. Wow this one really sounds intriguing. What is funny (and that people seem to forget) is that Pinhead isn't really in much of the original "Hellraiser". Frank is our primary antagonist, and he gets the most screen time of all the baddies. In a way it sounds like this film is getting back to the roots of the story... and yet it changes the Cenobites motives a bit. I'll need to check this one out.

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    1. Exactly! It's the humans who are truly evil in these movies, with the Cenobites serving more as metaphors for the hell they create for themselves. This is definitely apparent in Inferno, Hellseeker, and Deader, and they end up being some of the best movies in the series.

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