Fiend

1980

Action / Horror

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 29%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 29%
IMDb Rating 4.4/10 10 547 547

Plot summary

An evil spirit resurrects the corpse of a dead music teacher, who now must strangle and absorb people's energy in order to stay alive. When he moves to the suburbs of Baltimore and resumes giving music lessons, he begins to cause suspicion amongst his neighbors.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
May 14, 2020 at 12:27 PM

Director

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
852.88 MB
956*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
Seeds ...
1.55 GB
1424*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by hwg1957-102-265704 4 / 10

"And tomorrow we shall renew ourselves again"

Gary Kender (with a big moustache) suspects that his music playing neighbour Eric Longfellow (with an even bigger moustache) may be a local serial killer. He discovers that Longfellow's deeds are being made by a red glowing fiend that has inhabited the dead body of a music teacher. This is a slow moving film with scenes of a man feeding a cat, a bottle of wine being opened, a candle being lit, a man opening a box and a man getting into his car filmed at a slow pace, to say the least.

Richard Nelson as Kender must be one of the most unappealing heroes in film. One wanted to punch his nose five minutes after his character first appears. Don Leifert as the fiendish Longfellow is moderately entertaining and Elaine White as Marsha Kender is winsomely cute. As is Pepper who played Dorian the cat. George Stover is suitably cringing as Dennis Frye. Not a film to set the pulse racing, to say the least.

Reviewed by Scarecrow-88 5 / 10

Fiend

A demonic creature enters rotted corpse in a graveyard, assuming the identity as head of a violin company, needing the lifeforce of human victims to prolong it's existence. Without the human lifeforce it needs, the corpse would quickly degenerate, returning to the grotesque state it was once before the demon took it over. As Longfellow(..portrayed by Don Leifert, an effective bit of casting, I thought), the demon stalks and strangles victims, maintaining human form as long as it can feed without interruption but when a concerned snooping neighbor, Gary Kender(Richard Nelson) finds him suspicious, this creature's reign of terror could very well be jeopardized.

Without the monetary benefits of major Hollywood studios, director Dan Dohler does what he can with limited resources available. Using red animated cells, Dohler shows Longfellow's glowing hands as they wrap around the throats of unfortunate victims, until his whole body eventually emanates. Dohler has latex make-up applied to Leifert's face, while also dying his hair to show how the body regresses, until he finds another victim to feed energy from. There's a room with an altar, and candles, coordinated off with a black curtain inside Longfellow's basement where he slices apart photographs of victims he killed(..for some odd reason, he keeps his knife in a box). The film gets rather repetitious as Longfellow follows after victims, assaults them, and leaves their bodies falling in a heap to the ground. We see Longfellow's means for maintaining an existence(..his long-suffering secretarial taskmaster, Dennis Frye, played by Dohler regular George Stover often performing his duties while Longfellow can go about his malevolent activities)and Gary's sleuthing, seeking to find the one responsible for the murder of the little girl neighbor behind his own house. This is quite a family affair as Dohler casts friends and relatives in various roles, shooting scenes in his own house and neighborhood, every bit a labor of love(..actor/producer Stover has said that Fiend is Dohler's favorite film of those he has directed).

With Marsha(Elaine White), Gary's beloved wife, against her better judgment(..Gary's always insists her lock the doors for personal safety, and Longfellow actually murdered a girl behind their house for petesake!), entering Longfellow's house(..he calls for pain medication, hoping to draw her into his lair for her lifeforce), Dohler obviously sets up his big suspense sequence where the threat covered extensively in the newspapers regarding a series of killings in the area, hits right at home. One would have to question such a decision to enter such a rather unpleasant fellow's home without talking it over with Gary(..who is away asking a kid about what he saw in regards to witnessing Longfellow's murder of his employee). The ending is as bizarre as the opening, showing the demon in it's original state(..where it came from and goes to is anybody's guess)before entering the corpse. This wasn't as bad as I imagined it would be, mainly because Leifert's Longfellow is such a reprehensible creep, he remains an effective heavy throughout.

Reviewed by tilapia 5 / 10

bad but sympathetic horror-flick for patient viewers

Is this movie really as bad as the former comments made it out to be? Personally I don't think so. Sure, the acting is (sometimes painfully) bad, the special fx are laughable and the lightning sucks (some parts are so dark you can hardly follow what's happening) but who rents forgotten curiosities like this for it's production values? And does a minimal budget, inexperienced crew and a very 'functional' script necessarily result in cheezy, grade Z 'good for laughs'-kind of movie? I strongly disagree. Somehow the B movie seems to have got mixed up with the grade Z-movie...

Anyway, to the film: the plot is about a devilish fiend (some kind of evil spirit in a human form) that has to kill people and steal their 'lifeforce', so thats it's stolen human body won't decompose. The fiend is a pathetic walrus-looking guy who spends his time giving violin-classes and listening to bad synthesizer music in his lonely apartment. The only people who get in the way of his killing spree is a nice, typical smalltown, middle class couple who of course starts playing detectives. The couple works great, and gives the films greatest performances. The actors are no professionals, but they act and look so normal it gives the film a genuine feel, and even moments of real warmth. The film has no fright or speed, so you'll have to have both patience and appreciation for the rare glimpses of creativity, dreams and simple humanity that sometimes surround B-movies like this one.

I somehow kind of ended up liking this little oddity, but don't take my recommendation too seriously - I often end up liking this kind of nice-spirited, slow horror-sleepers that nobody seems to remember. Also worth mentioning is that there is no gore or nudity, so gorehounds and fans of euro-horror cinema better stay far away.

I'll give it 5/10 for it's heart and humanity. Failure can be beautiful.

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