We finish out the first ten years of 60-For-60 with yet another William Shatner vehicle (hot on the heels of 1974’s sweat-soaked gigolo shocker IMPULSE), though this baby belongs lock stock and barrel to Oscar winner Ernest Borgnine.
After his father melts in front of his mother (Ida Lupino) and him, Mark Preston (Shatner) heads down to old, abandoned Redstone to make a deal with John Corbis, Satan’s Minister on Earth (Ernie B). Seems the Preston family is in possession of Corbis’ book of possessed souls, and he wants it back, so Mark bets his soul/freedom against the book. Is Mark’s faith stronger than that of Corbis?
It’s not, so it’s up to Dr. Tom Preston (Tom Skerritt!) to return home and figure out what happened to his family. Along for the ride is Tom’s wife Julie, who had visions of covens, upside down crosses and Satanic rituals during her recent ESP experiment and seems to be somewhat of a wax expert.
When Julie gets abducted by Corbis and his minions (including John Travolta!), it’s up to Tom and his pal Dr. Richards (Eddie Albert) to save the day and make it rain. The Devil’s Rain!
I’m not sure how or why this slice of Satanic Seventies Sinema flew under my radar for so long. It’s got the desolate vibe of THE HILLS HAVE EYES (1977) and RACE WITH THE DEVIL (1975), but always had a bit of a crappy reputation. But, as I’ve learned in the past (like in the case of THE SENTINEL and PROPHECY), other people are idiots and their opinions should never be trusted.
Director Robert Fuest (ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES and its sequel) packs the flick’s 86-minute running time with sacrifices, explosions, flashbacks (Pilgrim Borgnine!), and plenty of melting eyeless minions.
But this is Borgnine’s show—from his aw-shucks toothy grin and extra husky Satan robes to his transformation into a goat-horned demon, he really seems to be having a blast. – Dan Taylor











