The Devil Rides Out 1968
Character? Nah, there's no time for that ole chum.

For some reason I thought I had already seen this Hammer Horror classic and maybe I had when I was younger but I could not recall the opening scenes suggesting I had not. I recognised imagery from the film thanks to trailers, clips and segments in Iron Maiden videos; perhaps this was the cause of my mistake. My expectations were high when hitting play as some, especially in the British Horror Group I am a member of, herald it as peak Hammer with the great Christopher Lee often siting The Devil Rides Out as his favourite Hammer film. It had a lot to live up to, however, invariably such films fail to deliver due to unmeetable expectations, but Christopher Lee, Devil worship, Charles Gray, directed by the great Terence Fisher…what could go wrong?
First of all, it was lovely to see Christopher Lee starring as the protagonist, not the action type, that was the job of Leon Greene, but as the wise council and voice of reason, no wonder it was Lee’s favourite Hammer film, he got the chance to play a good guy for once.
The film doesn’t hang about, as soon as Leone Green lands his plane and is met by Christopher Lee. He asks about someone called Simon and within a few lines of dialogue we’re at Simon’s new house because they’re worried about him and hadn’t seen him for at least three months. My first thought was he’d met a girl or taken a new job but it turns out he’s having a dinner party and hob nobbing with a group of new friends from an astronomical society. Of course, Christopher Lee suspects they’re all devil worshippers ready to sacrifice chickens. For me, it was a stretch for him to conclude this within the first nine minutes of the film and I wish more time was given for his suspicions to embed. A general decline in Simon’s behaviour perhaps or more clues gathered to Simon’s new ‘hobby’, it all happened a little too quickly, especially as Simon’s behaviour is quite pleasant and not sinister at all. Simon’s bought a new house, I’ve not seen him in three months that means he’s dealing in black magic. Simon insists Greene and Lee leave (this would make more than thirteen at the party and thus unable to perform the ritual) but Lee punches Simon’s lights out instead before kidnapping him and slugging the butler at the same time, it was all a little clunky for me.

Because the film wasted no time in getting on with proceedings I felt the characterisation suffered because I had little to no investment for our heroes. I’m always one for saying story is king but an extra few scenes to build the characters would’ve gone a long way, although, this would’ve pushed it far beyond Hammer’s 90 minute movie trend. There’s a lot of telling and showing in the first twenty minutes with Lee’s character telling us he’s dealing with devil worshippers yet we don’t actually see anything transpire except for chickens in a basket. Then, a naked bloke with weird eyes turns up and hypnotises Greene. After escaping, Lee explains how they’re in a race against time to save their friend and they must find the girl they met at the gathering at the start, which then cuts to Greene having a bit of a sleep and Lee sat at his desk. The stakes are raised but, for me, they are too high and the plot should’ve been allowed to build to reach such high stakes.
Greene picks up the woman from gathering to take her to lunch and so begins the usual awkward Hammer romance with the woman who is a member of the occult. She steals a car and Greene goes after her in a fairly terrible car chase. The chase, their relationship, it all comes across as clunky and unconvincing and it’s not until the actual devil worshipping scene does the film finally hit a high light. What a high light it is as the worshippers express joy at freshly squeezed goat’s blood. Greene and Lee can only look on as frivolity ensues, the baptised drunk on the crimson liquid, it’s a disturbing image which becomes even more bizarre when the goat of Mendes appears just like in the video The Number of the Beast by Iron Maiden. Chaos ensues when Greene and Lee gate crash and I could not help sense this would’ve made for a fitting finale because it was quite brilliant.

Sadly, the pace dies and rituals and hallucinations drag on the film after peaking with the appearance of the goat of Mendes. I can see what they were trying to do but the ropey special fx, lack of any sort of character build up in the first third and random, noisy things happening meant it failed to draw me in or care about the characters or proceedings. Charles Gray’s character was obviously the film’s antagonist but he was woefully underused and I would’ve like to have seen his character and motivations explored more because I felt no actual threat from him. It was a wasted opportunity because Gray portrays sinister so deliciously.
My friend said The Devil Rides Out scared him as a kid and I can fully understand why. The imagery and tone of the film is classic Hammer and there’s always something unsettling about mob cults, yet I found the film has not aged well and an extra thirty minutes of story telling would’ve gone down a treat and made for more of a coherent film. As it stands, all the ingredients are there, the execution in this instance was clunky and not as strong as the elements contained within. 5/10









