| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Mel Ferrer | ... |
Dr. Walker
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| Glenn Ford | ... |
Det. Jake Durham
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| Lance Henriksen | ... |
Raymond Armstead
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| John Huston | ... |
Jerzy Colsowicz
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| Joanne Nail | ... |
Barbara Collins
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| Sam Peckinpah | ... |
Dr. Sam Collins
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| Shelley Winters | ... |
Jane Phillips
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| Paige Conner | ... |
Katy Collins
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Ja Townsend |
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Jack Dorsey |
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Johnny Popwell | ... |
AAA Mechanic
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Wallace Wilkinson | ... |
Police Captain
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Steve Somers |
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Lou Walker | ... |
AAA Mechanic
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Walter Gordon Sr. | ... |
Thomas
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John Huston stars as an intergalactic warrior who joins a cosmic Christ figure in battle against a demonic 8-year-old girl, and her pet hawk, while the fate of the universe hangs in the balance. Multi-dimensional warfare, pre-adolescent profanity and brutal avian attacks combine to transport the viewer to a state unlike anything they've experienced... somewhere between Hell and the darkest reaches of outer space. Written by DrafthouseFilms
The plot, as I hopefully understand it, is that Satan (or Sateen, as this film calls him) fathers children with supernatural powers. One of these children is 8 year-old Katy, who has telekinetic powers and a heavy Southern drawl. An intergalactic traveler called The Visitor must battle the child for the fate of the universe....or something like that. There's also some stuff about an evil hawk, some bald aliens, and a crazy-eyed Jesus with a bad blonde wig.
Nonsensical Italian-made claptrap that combines '70s fascinations with the occult and aliens. It's an awful movie that rips off many better movies, made watchable by some striking imagery and interesting casting. John Huston, Lance Henriksen, Sam Peckinpah, Mel Ferrer, Shelly Winters, and Glenn Ford are all in this. That says more about the state of their respective careers at the time than it does about the quality of this production. Incoherent but good for some laughs. Dig that terribly out of place soundtrack, too.