Day of the Beast

Reviewed by: T.Tallis

January 24, 1999

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Spanish director Alex de la Iglesia cut his teeth as Pedro Almodovar's production designer, and "Day of the Beast", his second feature, shows off that (dubious) pedigree in a lurid and catchy fashion (though with very little added weight); his version of Madrid in this film is a garish, candy-colored package overflowing with millenial hysteria...roving packs of hoodlums roam the streets immolating the homeless, seminars on Armageddon prophecy are delivered on Christmas Eve, and Father Angel Barriatura embarks on a perverse crime and sin spree in an obsessive attempt to gain the trust of Satan in order to destroy him. Father Angel is under the belief that he has cracked the code of Revelations through numerology after decades of working at it in a cabalistic fervor, and that he has knowledge of the place and birthdate of the Antichrist: Christmas 1995, somewhere in Madrid. Enlisting the help of an acid-dropping heavy-metal loser and a fraudulent but hugely popular television psychic, Angel begins his frantic quest for mankind's salvation through his individual self-corruption. Of course, that's about as deep as "Beast" gets...this ain't exactly Bunuel (hell, it ain't even "The Omen III"). The cheeky, juvenile and overtly slapstick tone of the picture is established in the opening scene wherein an elderly monseignor is crushed to death under a 20-foot cross, and Iglesias spends the rest of the film making damn sure nobody takes it at all seriously. And that's the film's main failing; it's novel at first to watch the nebbishy priest pushing sidewalk mimes down subway steps, scratching parked cars with his keys, and stuck in the middle of a death-metal moshpit, but the already rather thin joke evaporates rather quickly, and is replaced, all too typically, with narrative inconsistencies and special-effects overload. A darker, more insidious tone and a slightly more thoughtful exploration into the nature of religious hysteria would have benefitted the picture greatly. As it is, though, it's breezy and generally confident, and for no-brainer, schlock, lowbrow entertainment, it's at least two steps above average. Whatever *that's* worth.

 

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