Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

Late Night with the Devil

Late Night with the Devil
2023
9
Director: 
Cameron Cairnes, Colin Cairnes

SYNOPSIS: 

Set in the 1970s, Late Night with the Devil captures a fictional live broadcast where popular talk show host Jack Delroy, played by David Dastmalchian, attempts to boost his show’s ratings with an outrageous Halloween special. As the episode unfolds, Delroy invites an unusual mix of guests, including a young girl with a haunting past and supernatural researchers, leading to a night of spine-chilling, unexpected events. As supernatural occurrences escalate, the broadcast spirals into horror, leaving both the show’s characters and audience questioning reality.

REVIEW: 

Late Night with the Devil by directors Cameron and Colin Cairnes uses a retro TV show setting to create an unnerving atmosphere that draws viewers into a slowly intensifying horror. The film’s attention to detail, from the 70s grainy footage style to shifting between black-and-white and color, sets the tone perfectly. The clever cinematography immerses audiences as if they’re watching a live broadcast unraveling in real time, a technique that intensifies the suspense, especially during the eerie "commercial breaks." David Dastmalchian’s portrayal of Jack Delroy is a highlight, conveying both desperation and a subtle descent into darkness. His character’s manipulation of a vulnerable young guest and a proposed live exorcism for ratings builds a multi-layered commentary on society's fascination with live tragedies.

The tension in *Late Night with the Devil* is amplified by practical effects and unsettling performances, particularly from young Ingrid Torelli. Her disturbing behavior throughout the live exorcism segments channels classic possession horror, drawing comparisons to *The Exorcist* but with a modern twist that keeps the storyline refreshing. The supporting cast, including Laura Gordon and Ian Bliss, helps maintain the suspense through believable reactions to increasingly terrifying phenomena.

Despite its chilling final act, some critics noted that the narrative leaves certain backstories underdeveloped, such as Delroy’s past and motivations. Nonetheless, the film succeeds in creating a memorable, horrifying experience, blending supernatural horror with a critique of exploitation in media. As the climactic moments unfold, viewers are forced to confront the lengths to which people go for fame, making *Late Night with the Devil* not just a horror movie but also a commentary on cultural fascination with live disasters.

*Late Night with the Devil* premiered at the SXSW Film Festival in 2023 and was released widely in 2024. For more on the cast and production, check out IMDb, and for additional reviews, see Flickering Myth and High on Films.

SIMILAR MOVIES REVIEWS

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

Pet Sematary Review

Pet Sematary

2019

Whether you’re the type of person who loves remakes or simply the type who loves to hate them, it’s highly likely that 2019’s Pet Sematary is on your radar for one reason or another if you’re into horror. It’s directed by Kevin Kölsch and Dennis Widmyer (who also directed Starry Eyes) and is, of course, a reboot of the classic Stephen King film Pet Sematary from 1983. Pet Sematary stars Jason Clarke (Winchester, Trust), Amy Seimatz (The Sacrament, You’re Next, Bitter Feast), and the always legendary John Lithgow (Raising Cane, Twilight Zone: The Movie). Those who aren’t... Read More

Candyman

1992

In this unfairly forgotten film, Bernard Rose proposes a terrible genius loci: in fact a popular area (Cabrini-Green) seems to be manned by Candyman, a bloodthirsty spirit that guts with a hook anyone who summons him in front of the mirror. Helen finds him out by chance, collecting interviews for her thesis on contemporary folklore. After discovering that some years earlier, precisely in the Cabrini-Green, some violent homicides remained unpunished, Helen hypothesizes to have mistakenly collected only narratives, concerning real events that have been modified, year by... Read More

Hereditary - Evil runs in the family

2018

“Hereditary”  is a literally "homemade" horror. The physical home, as a place of family life and as creative microcosm of Annie, and the metaphysical home, as a dreamlike symbol of the stability or instability of the Ego, are inextricably intertwined in a game of Chinese boxes : a husband , a son, a daughter, and a miniaturist job she loves. But also a bulky mother: Ellen. Annie has always been trying to fix her "home": and soon we realize that something, in addition to the ambivalent relationship between her and the now defunct Ellen, does not work. Starting from... Read More

Carnage Park Review

Carnage Park

2016

Like his peer Quentin Tarantino, writer/director Michael Keating is famous for making films that are all about borrowing from the greats to create something truly unique. Carnage Park is definitely a good example of his fast-paced filmmaking style in action, but how does it stack up to his other work, and is it actually worth a spot on your running list of must-see films? Carnage Park can probably best be described as a horror film crossed with a crime thriller. In addition to being written and directed by Michael Keating (who also directed Psychopaths, Ritual and the... Read More

A Quiet Place review

A Quiet Place

2018

There are movies that take their time building a mood and movies that pull you right into their carefully crafted worlds pretty much right away. John Krakinski’s A Quiet Place is definitely the latter. The first thing the viewer sees is a barefoot family scavenging for supplies in the middle of an abandoned supermarket. However, they’re doing so completely silently – not exactly average for a family that includes three children. We’re promptly informed via a title card that we’re on “Day 89” of whatever’s going on and with that, our journey into this very quiet world... Read More