Detectives Sean and David Carter are on the case to find a gruesome serial killer terrorizing the city. Joining forces with Detective Christine Egerton, they dig deeper into a spiraling maze... Read allDetectives Sean and David Carter are on the case to find a gruesome serial killer terrorizing the city. Joining forces with Detective Christine Egerton, they dig deeper into a spiraling maze of horror that may not be of this world.Detectives Sean and David Carter are on the case to find a gruesome serial killer terrorizing the city. Joining forces with Detective Christine Egerton, they dig deeper into a spiraling maze of horror that may not be of this world.
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Featured reviews
When it comes to these long-running horror franchises, the rights-holding studios have to make at least one new film every few years or risk losing the rights. This results in some truly awful films, cheaply made and rushed through production just to beat a deadline and meet a legal requirement. This is just such a movie, as have been the last several in this once-groundbreaking series. The first two films rank among the best horror films of all time, but starting with the third (when Dimension Films starting producing them) they've gotten progressively worse.
This newest film may be a tiny bit better than the atrocious previous entry (2011's Hellraiser: Revelations), but it's still terrible, with vague characterizations, bored performances, and a distinct cheapness to the production that undercuts some of the attempts at world-building. This story attempts to expand a bit on the bureaucracy of Hell as hinted at in the second film, namely with new character The Auditor, played by the director. He actually gets more screentime than series hallmark Pinhead, although he's not as impressive, and looks like the hell-cops from Highway to Hell (1991). In summary, all but the most die-hard fans should avoid this often dull and pretentious latest movie in the series.
Photography is good, I really appreciated the color grading that sets perfectly the tone of the plot, both special and practical effects are on point. There are a lot of graphic scenes, but I feel that first movies were more violent and gruesome. However there are some pretty amazing killings. The pace of the movie is perfect, but the plot is very predictable and you can clearly see that there are a lot of ideas recycled from Hellraiser: Inferno. Maybe next time try not to pick a detective as main character.
After Revelations, my expectations were really low. I am just happy that the director managed to create something good and that could have save the franchise from the retirement. I really hope that Dimension Films will take seriously in consideration to create an extended narrative universe. Please, make it happen.
dont waste your time
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Doug Bradley, the original Pinhead, was asked in an interview what his advice would be to Paul T. Taylor who plays Pinhead in Hellraiser: Judgment (2018), he sarcastically answered: "According to Gary (Gary J. Tunnicliffe, the director of the movie), Mr. Taylor has the screen presence of Peter Cushing and Ralph Fiennes, so he won't need any help from me, will he?"
- Goofs(at around 25 mins) When the detectives enter the crime scene at the children's park, there is a mirror as a part of the playground. When one of the detectives moves to reveal the mirror, you can see what appears to be a crew member holding a boom mic.
- Quotes
Carl Watkins: Oh, Jesus Christ!
The Auditor: Heavens, no. Same city, completely different zip code.
- Crazy creditsThere's an extra scene after the end credits.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Atop the Fourth Wall: Clive Barker's Hellraiser Summer Special (2019)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $350,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1