Demons (1985): When the Screen Tore Open - Lamberto Bava's Heavy Metal Apocalypse
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In 1985, at the height of the Satanic Panic and PMRC hearings, Italian horror masters Lamberto Bava and Dario Argento delivered the ultimate middle finger to media censorship: a film where watching a horror movie literally transforms you into a demon. Shot in nine weeks in Cold War-era West Berlin, "Demons" is part meta-cinema commentary, part gore-soaked thrill ride, and entirely unapologetic.
With a pounding Claudio Simonetti synth score colliding with a heavy metal soundtrack featuring Mötley Crüe, Accept, and Billy Idol, the film literalizes every fear the moral panic warriors had about horror and metal corrupting youth - and then cranks it to eleven with a guy on a motorcycle slicing demons with a samurai sword. For Lamberto Bava, this was his one moment to step out of his legendary father Mario's shadow and create something uniquely his own.
This is the story of how a claustrophobic Italian splatter film became a cultural statement, a technical achievement in practical effects, and a love letter to everyone who was told that horror movies and heavy metal would destroy their souls. Spoiler alert: we survived. The demons didn't.