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IMDbPro

Le Messie du mal

Original title: Messiah of Evil
  • 1974
  • 12
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Anitra Ford and Marianna Hill in Le Messie du mal (1974)
A young woman goes searching for her missing artist father. Her journey takes her to a strange Californian seaside town governed by a mysterious undead cult.
Play trailer1:29
1 Video
99+ Photos
Folk HorrorSupernatural HorrorZombie HorrorHorror

A young woman goes searching for her missing artist father. Her journey takes her to a strange Californian seaside town governed by a mysterious undead cult.A young woman goes searching for her missing artist father. Her journey takes her to a strange Californian seaside town governed by a mysterious undead cult.A young woman goes searching for her missing artist father. Her journey takes her to a strange Californian seaside town governed by a mysterious undead cult.

  • Directors
    • Willard Huyck
    • Gloria Katz
  • Writers
    • Willard Huyck
    • Gloria Katz
  • Stars
    • Michael Greer
    • Marianna Hill
    • Joy Bang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Willard Huyck
      • Gloria Katz
    • Writers
      • Willard Huyck
      • Gloria Katz
    • Stars
      • Michael Greer
      • Marianna Hill
      • Joy Bang
    • 140User reviews
    • 99Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:29
    Official Trailer

    Photos117

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    + 111
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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Michael Greer
    Michael Greer
    • Thom
    Marianna Hill
    Marianna Hill
    • Arletty
    • (as Mariana Hill)
    Joy Bang
    Joy Bang
    • Toni
    Anitra Ford
    Anitra Ford
    • Laura
    Royal Dano
    Royal Dano
    • Joseph Lang
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    • Charlie
    Charles Dierkop
    Charles Dierkop
    • Gas Attendant
    Bennie Robinson
    • Albino Trucker
    Morgan Fisher
    • Canrobert Galleries Art Dealer
    Emma Truckman
    • Unknown
    Dyanne Asimow
    • Unknown
    • (as Dyanne Simon)
    Herb Margolis
    • Unknown
    Alex Michaels
    • Unknown
    Walter Hill
    Walter Hill
    • Stabbing Victim in Prologue
    Laurie Charlap-Hyman
    • Unknown
    Bill Norton
      Willard Huyck
      Willard Huyck
      • Zombie in Car
      • (uncredited)
      Gloria Katz
      Gloria Katz
      • Ticket Booth Zombie
      • (uncredited)
      • Directors
        • Willard Huyck
        • Gloria Katz
      • Writers
        • Willard Huyck
        • Gloria Katz
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews140

      6.37K
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      Featured reviews

      5BaronBl00d

      An Interesting, Somewhat Hidden Diamond in the Rough

      Virtually unknown horror pic from the 70s about a woman looking for her missing artist father and finding some kind of zombie cult wiping out a Californian seaside town. The story's flaws are legion as huge holes fill much of it, yet the story about a man coming from/to the canyon a 100 years ago that had been a member of that infamous party forced to consume...well, it was interesting in nothing else. In the beginning of the film some care and effort had been given to help distinguish who was a member of this flesh-eating cult that work together, play together, and rip flesh together. You won't see any gore at all gore-hounds - so this one may not be for you. In point of fact, there is little actually seen in the film other than people at a table gnawing meat(from what looks like it came right out of a supermarket)and like scenes. What this film DOES have going for it are some very clever scenes amidst an obviously constrained budget. There are no names here except Elisha Cook Jr. in a pretty good cameo as a crazed drunk and Royal Dano as the film's narrator and a central character. Other than that we have the daughter played by beautiful Marianna Hill and a man with two girls as his companions holing up in Hill's house when asked to leave town. The man likes mysteries and the girls want to leave. Both are pretty; Anitra Ford, star of such films like Invasion of the Bee Girls, is sultry and decent and her leggy, young co-star is, well let's say its one of the more interesting stage names, Joy Bang. In fact Joy is in the best scene in the film that takes place in a movie theater. The theater is empty at first and each successive scene has more and more of these "beings" moving into the background of the theater and then on all sides of her while a God awful scene from a trailer for a western starring Sammy Davis Jr. plays on the big screen. This scene was darkly humorous and chilling. There were other scenes too, but before I get too carried away with what I did like - this film has some flaws. The aforementioned script has lots of unexplained or poorly explained things throughout: how does the man come from the sea? what is the significance of the guy that eats rats? why was the art dealer blind?(an unusual touch) Where had...? OK, I have lots more but the point has been made. The film's budget is very low. Nothing is shown on screen that might have exhausted the smallest of budgets except for a lot of paint being thrown around a room and one stunt man wearing an outfit that was set to flames. The town used for location shots suits the creepiness of the plot and adds to the film's atmosphere. The acting is not real bad nor is it real good. The four central characters were all chosen not for their abilities but rather for their physical features. They could have been a lot worse in front of the camera in their defense. The ending is way over-blown too. Flaws notwithstanding, I liked this film overall and was impressed with much in it(just loved that movie theater scene) and heartily recommend it to the viewer of low-budget quality horror films.
      6claudio_carvalho

      Atmospheric but Messy and with Disappointing Conclusion

      After losing contact with her artist father, Arletty (Marianna Hill) travels to the coastal town Point Dune. She does not find him and stumbles upon Thom (Michael Greer), a weird wealthy man that is travelling with two lovers, Toni (Joy Bang) and Laura (Anitra Ford), to meet her father. She reads his diary and soon she realizes that there is something strange with the residents of the Californian town.

      "Messiah of Evil" is an atmospheric horror film with a messy screenplay and disappointing conclusion. There are several great scenes and creepy deaths with wonderful cinematography. However the character Thom never works and his arrival to the house of Arletty's father is ridiculous. The living sharing Point Dune with the dead is also absurd. Last but not the least, there is no satisfactory explanation for the transformation of the dwellers into zombies. My vote is six.

      Title (Brazil): "Zumbís do Mal" ("Zombies of Evil")
      6RomanJamesHoffman

      Like having a bizarre, zombie themed lucid dream.

      'Messiah of Evil' is a relatively unknown B-Movie horror curio from the Seventies. A woman goes to a small seaside town to look for her artist father after he mysteriously stops correspondence with her and finds that something is well and truly afoot in the town. From the off the film establishes a disjointed atmosphere which is accentuated when she teams up with a man and two (stunning) women involved in a bizarre three-way relationship and together they try to fathom just what the dickens is going on in this creepy town. From here they learn that the town has become (for reasons unknown) a flesh-eating zombie cult.

      On the surface the movie appears to have little in the way of characterisation or plot, but any gaps in these qualities only serve to highlight the lingering oddness that pervades the film which reminded me strongly of the distanced dream-like quality of Herk Harvey's B-movie classic 'Carnival of Souls' (1962) and, to a lesser extent, Argento's 'Suspiria' (1977)…if the hysteric flailing of Argento's classic had been given a sedative, that is. This effect is achieved through the locale of the town itself, the fine cinematography, the use of voice-overs, and the music all working effectively to build suspense as the eeriness unfolds climaxing in some genuinely surreal and haunting scenes.

      However, it must be said that while I found the surreal world created for me easy to step into and inhabit I can easily see how fans of conventional horror would be put off by the creeping pace and absence of anything tangibly horrific. Still, it's the kind of movie that lives happily with its "cult" tag and sits comfortably among the late-night schedules which it knows all-too-well how to haunt.

      **************************

      Public domain movie. Watch it free here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIuUyNwq9T8
      6zombielogic-1

      Disagree with you buddy

      I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with the guy who wrote the review on the top screen. Not vehemently but slightly. This is a really good and unique film for the genre. In contrast to most of the living dead movies ever made this is a classic.

      You;re right, though, the scene at the supermarket and the theatre scene are standouts. I think it is well shot, or at least unintentionally atmospheric and I like it because I get a feel of that time and place in independent film-making.

      Could have been better but more than technical perfection I look for uniqueness in a movie and this one is unique. Since video stores no longer actually have videos it's great that movie like this are making their way to compilation packages at media superstores. If you see this one in a combo package go ahead and but it I think you'll like it.

      www.zombielogicpress.com
      amesmonde

      Before Romero's Dawn and Crazies...

      Arletty (Marianna Hill) arrives in a small, odd, creepy coastal town in California looking for her father and she quickly learns little is as it seems.

      Before Romero's Dawn of the Dead and The Crazies, there was Dead People a.k.a Messiah of evil. Shot in 1971 the film was not released until 1973. Like H.P. Lovecraft's Dagon and The Wicker Man (1973), weird locals are hiding a horrific secret... In Messiah, the people of Point Dune worship the rise of a red moon as they become zombies. The storyline is disjointed, but this adds to the mystic, surreal and dreamlike quality of the film. Admittedly, it feels art house, there is some irregular editing and the score is very much of its time, but there's plenty to like about it.

      Kaufman's Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), Dead & Buried (1981) and the aforementioned Dawn of the Dead clearly have taken a cue from Willard Huyck's jumbled but effective film. Especially the scene where slinky brunette Anitra Ford is pursued through a supermarket. There is also truly creepy scene again with Ford and an albino trucker, played by Bennie Robinson, who you'd think would have been in a lot more horror movies. If you liked Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971) and Night of the Living Dead there's some horror delight to be found here from the shocking first kill to the insane asylum ending.

      Messiah of Evil oozes dread and suspense, it's a chilling 70's horror flick that despite its faults is a lot better than some of today's so called horrors.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Many of the extras in the film were unemployed NASA workers.
      • Goofs
        Bennie Robinson's character mispronounces the name Richard Wagner (see trivia).
      • Quotes

        Arletty: [narrating] We sit in the sun and wait. We sleep. And we dream. Each of us dying slowly in the prison of our minds.

      • Alternate versions
        The recent DVD release (under the title Messiah of Evil) contains a version of the film that omits the song "Hold on to Love" that opens and closes some versions of the film.
      • Connections
        Edited into Cent une tueries de zombies (2012)
      • Soundtracks
        Hold On To Love
        Music and Lyrics by Eliane Tortel

        Sung by Raun MacKinnon

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      FAQ16

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • June 13, 1979 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Messiah of the Evil Dead
      • Filming locations
        • Anaheim, California, USA(Location)
      • Production companies
        • V/M Productions
        • International Cine Film Corp.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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