Tag Archives: god-monster

Man in the Fields (2024)

Starring Isacco Salvi, Martina Capaccioli, Marco Cevoli, and Marcello Castiglioni. Written by Samuele Breschi and Isacco Salvi. Directed by Samuele Breschi. Produced by Luca Boni, Marco Ristori, Valentina Cau and Mario Niccolò Messina.

The ritual written down on these pages should not be read out...
The ritual written down on these pages will invoke death and destruction..

A group of friends perform a ritual, reciting the words, “Who will scare the crows away.” After they do this, and before the ritual can be finished, a stranger enters the house, drags one of the friends, David (Salvi), outside – and then the stranger cuts his own palm, allowing the blood to spill onto David’s face. From then on, matters only get worse for the group, and it transpires that a creature will hunt them down until only one of them is left alive…

Man in the Fields artwork

This US film, shot in Italy, is far from perfect, but has some well-done passages, the musical score is very good in places, and there’s enough intrigue in the story to ensure viewer interest is maintained.

Isacco Salvi plays David

MAN IN THE FIELDS is director Samuele Breschi’s debut movie and, despite the uneven acting (the cast members all seem to be Italians speaking English, with some being more accomplished thespians than others), it’s a good first effort.

The friends really shouldn't take part in this ritual...
The friends really shouldn’t take part in this ritual…

One of the highlights of the film is the pagan-god-in-human-form creature that David turns into; it is a damn cool-looking skull-headed creature! It rips off the skin of David’s girlfriend like it’s a bloody onesie (the flayed skin still has its scalp attached)! The creature then drapes the girlfriend’s skin around its shoulders like a pashmina! 

Our Lord the Flayed, Xipe-Totec, stalks the world...
Our Lord the Flayed, Xipe-Totec, stalks the world…

The action scenes could’ve done with being shot with a bit more panache, but the film remains enjoyable nonetheless, thanks to the skull-headed man-creature and the effort that the filmmakers put into creating it; its face has muscles and eyes located beneath the bone of its animal skull-like head. It’s a pretty ace beastie.

Poster for Man in the Field

The mythos surrounding the events taking place in the movie revolves around two figures; the ‘Man in the Fields’ (who is the stranger we saw earlier, who is supposedly one of the ‘first men’) and ‘Xipe-Totec’ (a dark deity known as Our Lord the Flayed), who is the god of agriculture and spring.

Yikes! It's the Man in the Field himself!
Yikes! It’s the Man in the Fields himself!

The ensuing plot sees an older dude, Jonathan (Castiglioni), joining the action. He is the survivor of the massacre of a family from years earlier, and he’s the one who supplies the others with details regarding the occult situation that they’ve become entangled in.

Marcello Castiglioni plays Jonathan
Marcello Castiglioni plays Jonathan

Breschi and co-writer Isacco Salvi make some dubious plot choices, such as having Rob (Cevoli), one of the surviving friends who has become a bit of a psycho, deciding that the best way to deal with the horrific events he’s witnessed is to go to a house party! Though I guess this story choice does allow for some slo-mo mass panic and carnage scenes at the party later on.

The house party ends badly!
The house party ends badly!

The movie is flawed, for sure, but it does deserve kudos for its attempt at creating an absorbing mythology that sees the spirit of the nature god Xipe-Totec (which possesses the body of its victims, who develop the signature skull-like head) linked to the Man in the Fields in an ongoing cycle of rebirth and slaughter; the Man in the Fields, it seems, triggers the physical manifestation of Xipe-Totec (remember how he dripped his blood on David) so that Xipe-Totec becomes flesh in the physical world, after which the Man decapitates the god-creature to ensure that he remains immortal.

Top marks for the use of practical effects.

The Man in the Field remains immortal thanks to Man the cycle of rebirth and butchering he perpetrates...
The Man in the Fields remains immortal thanks to the cycle of rebirth and butchering he perpetrates…

Rawhead Rex (1986)

Yikes! It's Rawhead Rex!
Yikes! It’s Rawhead Rex!

Starring David Dukes, Kelly Piper, Hugh O’Conor, Cora Venus Lunny, Ronan Wilmot, Niall Toibin, Niall O’Brien and Heinrich von Schellendorf. Written by Clive Barker. Directed by George Pavlou. Produced by Kevin Attew, Don Hawkins, David Collins, Al Burgess and Paul Gwynn. Alpine Pictures/Green Man Productions

4K Blu-ray cover
4K Blu-ray cover
There's something nasty lurking beneath this standing stone...
There’s something nasty lurking beneath this standing stone…

An American author, Howard Hallenbeck (Dukes), travels around Ireland with his family, doing research for his book focusing on the persistence of sacred sites. The Hallenbecks are staying in a small village, where Howard is checking out the local church’s intriguing stained glass panels, when an enraged, toothsome monster is released from beneath an ancient menhir.

The demonic creature depicted in the stained glass is no mere myth...
The demonic creature depicted in the stained glass is no mere myth…

This beast goes on the rampage, and one of the creature’s victims is Howard’s son, provoking the upset & angry author to seek out a way to destroy the monster, but there are those, including the church’s rector, Declan O’Brien, who regard the critter as a pagan god…

A dentist's nightmare!
A dentist’s nightmare!

RAWHEAD REX started life as a short story included in Volume Three of Clive Barker’s BOOKS OF BLOOD anthology series. The original story is set in Kent, and features a folkloric humanoid monster, a kind of raw-fleshed, ferocious personification of hyper-toxic-masculinity. This berserk, barbaric boogeyman devours innocent children and violates women, though the brutal man-beast has an aversion to pregnant females and those who are menstruating: they cause a sense of fear within the ancient, feral being. Barker wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation, but he was pretty dissatisfied with the way the movie eventually turned out, prompting him to direct the next movie version of one of his stories himself, that film being HELLRAISER (1987), based on Barker’s novella THE HELLBOUND HEART.

Artwork for the Arrow Video Blu-ray release

Okay, I can fully understand why Clive Barker felt let down by the cinematic representation of his original yarn. There was no way George Pavlou’s low budget flick was going to live up to the impactful, visceral tone and atmosphere of Barker’s source material. I really like that original story, it’s one of my favourite Barker tales. And yet…   

…I believe that this film is definitely in need of reappraisal!

Maybe this sounds like I’m damning the movie with faint praise when I say that the practical effects monster on show here is better than so much of the cheap CGI dross churned out over the last couple of decades, but I do mean this as a compliment. Sure, Rawhead Rex’s scowling face doesn’t have an awful lot of different facial expressions, but it’s still damn satisfying to see an actual creature suit being used, something that is really there, really in the scenes! I love the fact this beast-man is basically a big, leather-clad humanoid monster with a huge maw full of teeth!

It's Rawhead Rex!
It’s Rawhead Rex!

The special effects team had a frantic four week deadline to create the Rawhead Rex creature: a body suit, with an animatronic monster head for close-ups, brought the snarling monster to life in the movie. And, by god, it works just fine!

Roaring, rubbery wonderfulness!
Roaring, rubbery wonderfulness!

The film is not as transgressive as the short story, but it is enthusiastically gory, and there is a lot of fun/cool stuff to look out for, like the great shot of Rawhead standing on a hill holding aloft a severed head, his beastly breath illuminated as he exhales. And then there’s the attack on the caravan park: faces are slashed and boobs get revealed as the wild, primal creature runs amok! And let’s not forget the blasphemous baptism scene (taken from the original story), where Rawhead bathes the kneeling Declan O’Brien with its urine!

Rawhead rampages through a caravan park!
Rawhead rampages through a caravan park!
Irish coppers go up in flames!
Irish coppers go up in flames!

O’Brien tells his boss, Reverend Coot, that Rawhead Rex is a god, a deity that was here long before Christ: before civilisation, Rawhead was the king of this place. Later on, O’Brien utters a classic line as he forces Coot to meet the deadly Rawhead: “Get upstairs, fuckface, I can’t keep god waiting!”

gory scene!

The barechested, muscled Rawhead (played by Heinrich von Schellendorf) has glowing red eyes, which have the ability to overwhelm the minds of some victims (the creature doesn’t have this power in the original story). “For you!” Says a burning cop, who has become one of Rawhead’s acolytes, as he immolates his fellow officers!

Beware the glowing red eyes!
Beware the glowing red eyes!

Salvation is hidden within the church’s altar, in the form of a small, stone earth-goddess-style idol, which a woman must wield, leading to an optical FX-drenched showdown, as Howard’s wife Elaine (Piper) uses the idol to unleash supernatural forces to drive Rawhead back into the ground. This is a colourful, rousing fantasy-horror finale!

Time for some magic!
Time for some magic!

Honestly, I don’t believe RAWHEAD REX deserves the derision levelled at it from many critics. It is an unpretentious, cheesy-but-satisfying, 80s-tastic entertainment, a B-movie that makes sure its rampaging, rubbery, rockin’, rampant god-beast is given a lot of time on screen! And for that I respect it!  

A toothy titan of terror!
A toothy titan of terror!