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Devil's Rock [DVD]

3.7 out of 5 stars 40 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Gina Varela, Karlos Drinkwater, Craig Hall, Matthew Sunderland
  • Directors: Paul Campion
  • Writers: Paul Campion, Paul Finch, Brett Ihaka
  • Producers: Leanne Saunders
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Metrodome Group
  • DVD Release Date: 11 July 2011
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B004ZJYEJU
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 63,260 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Set in the Channel Islands on the eve of D Day, two New Zealand commandos are sent to destroy German gun emplacements to distract Hitler's forces away from Normandy. On arrival, they discover a Nazi occult plot to unleash demonic forces to win the war.

Visual Effects created by WETTA.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
This is a well made, small budget flick from New Zealand and it has a setting that is becoming a new sub genre, that is the Nazi's and the occult. It starts the day before D-Day, when two New Zealand commandos have been sent to the Channel Islands as part of Operation Overlord and the subterfuge that was employed by the Allies. They are to blow up gun emplacements in a bid to make the Germans think that the Islands will be the staging post for the invasion of Europe. So far, so plausible, as they near their target they can hear tortured screams coming from the bowels of the cavernous outpost. Captain Ben Grogen (Craig Hall) decides it might be one of their men being tortured and so goes in against the advice of his Sargeant.

In some horrors you always want to know why do the `heroes' go into the big scary mansion where the lights don't work, instead of running as quickly as possible in the opposite direction. What director Paul Campion makes you realise is that it is foolish but heck you would probably do the same thing, so cliché avoided. A word about Mr Campion, he has worked as artist and painter on oodles of films including `The lord of the rings' trilogy but I think this is his first in the directors chair.

Well they go into the pit and to tell you any more would be a plot spoiler.
What I can say is that they do not find any of their comrades and most of the Germans are already dead, so what they do find is a whole lot worse. The German commander is Col Klaus Meyer (Mathew Sunderland) who is a member of the SS on one of Hitler's special missions to investigate the legendary witchcraft of the Islands.
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Format: DVD
When I bought the DVD, I was fully expecting a low budget movie, average acting and direction, so I wouldn't be disappointed. I was intrigued by the plot of the Allied commandos set out to raid enemy bastions on the eve of the D Day landings infiltrates German occupied Channel Islands to divert Hitler's attention from Normandy. When they successfully plant the bombs, they hear sounds of an apparent torture from the nearby bunker. Captain Ben Grogan (Craig Hall) despite the objection of Sergeant Joe Tane (Karlos Drinkwater), went to investigate assuming it could be a fellow soldier. While Grogan enter the large gun pit - bunker, Tane stands guard rather reluctantly giving the captain five minutes to do whatever he can. Soon hearing a gunshot he also enter the pit-bunker in search of Grogan. What he found was a book of black magic near a bloodied dead German soldier. The book in French, details with signs and symbols of the occult and Lucifer incantations, puzzles Tane who is killed by a someone in German uniform, soon Grogan is also captured.

That's an intro to the plot, which thickens and twists while weaving a web of horror. True, it's a low budget movie, but it's really well made. Great camera, audio, decent special effects, and an engaging story though sometimes the story drags a bit.

The entire cast, including the extras, is may be nine (that counts for characters after the main credits). Three main actors, since the character Tane is killed at the beginning, the story revolves around Craig Hall, the Nazi Colonel Klaus Meyer played b Matthew Sunderland, and Gina Varela's mysterious demonic entity.
Don't miss the epilogue: once the credits roll, wait for ten or so seconds until the film title, and see the epilogue.
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Format: DVD
Firstly whoever thought that using the tag-line "Saw with Swastikas" was a good idea is an idiot; it was taken out of context from a web-site review. That act of advertising lunacy almost made me avoid this movie and I would have missed what is a perfectly good old-fashioned horror movie.
The Nazi fascination with the occult is well documented and has been used in many movies from Raiders of the Lost Ark to Hellboy etc and in books by many authors including Dennis Wheatley and James Herbert and countless comics over the years.
The plot has been outlined before but basically two New Zealand commandoes are on a decoy sabotage mission the day before D-day, they land on one of the smaller Channel Islands where the Nazi's have a base. After setting their explosive charges they hear screams, fearing it is an allied soldier being tortured, and against the advice from his friend, Joe goes into the tunnels to try and rescue the prisoner. On hearing gun-shots Ben follows him and finds that the truth is far more sinister.
It's a well-paced movie using just four main characters the two NZ soldiers along with a suitably evil SS Colonel (Matthew Sunderland) and the female prisoner (Gina Varela) who happens to look like Ben's dead wife.
The gore lies mainly in the effects of the dead soldiers; it has no relevance to Saw in any way, if anything it actually underplays the gore at times. The creature effects aren't spectacular but they are more than effective enough for what is a lesser demon. There's even a passing reference to H P Lovecraft's Great Old Ones.
The ending even leaves enough scope for a sequel.
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