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      Good Against Evil

      TV-PG 1977 1h 18m Horror List
      Reviews 15% 250+ Ratings Audience Score A drifter (Dack Rambo) meets a San Francisco woman (Elyssa Davalos) picked by satanists to bear a child of the devil. Read More Read Less

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      Good Against Evil

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      Audience Reviews

      View All (16) audience reviews
      Audience Member what happened? left hanging.. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Audience Member Though it's a poor-boy's amalgam of several top-tier satanic horror films from the genre's heyday of the 1970's, I quite enjoyed this TV-movie, which was a failed pilot, for a proposed series that never came (the type of thing that Mia Wallace bragged that she had previously starred in to Vincent Vega in 'Pulp Fiction'). Philadelphian-born director Wendkos made only a handful of feature films from 1957-99, and 'Good Against Evil' has the workmanlike, low-budget yet professional, sheen that comes with the territory. The first half is a cross between 'Rosemary's Baby' and 'The Omen' series, with the difference that a female ('Jessica Gordon') is born, and it cuts from her 1955 birth in New York City to young adulthood in 1977 San Francisco. Another neat difference is that until now, she has been kept completely in the dark of her evil origins, and simply thinks that she has been 'lucky' and has had a 'guardian angel', though she notices that any man that gets close to her perishes in strange fashion, and comes to the distinct conclusion that it's no mere coincidence. Finally, she falls in love (with 'Andy Stuart'), and her birth father, Mr. Rimmin's plans of becoming immortalized through offering his daughter to the demon Astaroth are thus jeopardized. He has to interfere, and just before the two young lovebirds are to be married, he hypnotizes Jessica to forget everything and move to New Orleans, where she can be 'protected' once more. Not wanting to draw more attention by killing yet again, the 'tribe' decides that rather than murder Andy, to simply have him fall in love again with his ex-flame, Linday, staging an accident that puts her daughter into a coma, and possessing her in the process. Thus, the second half, which becomes a poor-man's version of 'The Exorcist'. Though the special effects are minor and laughable with the budgetary constraints, Wendkos does a decent job and the performances are fine. The ending is a bit over-the-top, though I enjoy those ambiguous yet doom-laden endings, by which you don't know what's about to happen, but you just know there's going to be trouble (like the finish in William Friedkin's 'Sorcerer', for example). Personally, I would have been more understated in my approach, simply showing the black cat was on the park bench, and not doing a close-up of its eyes. Plus, I did feel a bit cheated--Wendkos had done a good job of character development and making us care for what happened to the good people in the film, who were all in way over their heads--I wanted to know what happened to these people. So on the one hand, I can see why the pilot was unsuccessful, but I wish that at least a Part Two had been made. All things considered, if you enjoy satanic horror movies from the 70's as much as I do, it's well worth a look. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/24/23 Full Review Audience Member lame 'the exorcist' rip-off Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member It's slow, confusing, and mostly just a cash-in on The Exorcist. Of course, that does mean it has a fun exorcism scene, but that's pretty much all that the film has going for it. The characters aren't very good, and the general plot is weak. Still, it's not all a bad watch. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member A total laughable 70's ripoff of every supernatural movie that was out at that point. This was really intended as a pilot for a tv series that never took off. It's sorta ok in a cheesy shit way but in the end just isn't worth the time. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member If the ending wasn't a clue, the rest of the movie would leave you with no doubt that this was actually a pilot for a television show. For the 1970's this wasn't a bad piece of work... but not something that would become a lasting classic. There are too many similarites to "The Excorcist," and "Rosemary's Baby" to provide something new to watch. Besides, there's only so long you can have a guy and an excoricist travelling around looking for the guy's missing, soon-to-be-the-bride-of-Satan-girlfriend. Though, I will say, I did have to smile at how casually and nonchalantly the excorcist dodged an Azeroth tossed lamp to the head... though he lost that credibility shortly afterward with the quite literal pillow fight. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/24/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A drifter (Dack Rambo) meets a San Francisco woman (Elyssa Davalos) picked by satanists to bear a child of the devil.
      Director
      Paul Wendkos
      Producer
      Lin Bolen, Ernest Frankel
      Screenwriter
      Jimmy Sangster
      Production Co
      Frankel-Bolen Productions, 20th Century Fox Television
      Rating
      TV-PG
      Genre
      Horror
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Apr 28, 2017
      Runtime
      1h 18m
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