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The Devil's Chair was one of Adam Masons earlier films. It comes from a point when Mason was working with lesser budgets and gives the impression that he and his crew had gotten the use of an abandoned hospital or some such facility and decided to set a film around its environs. Mason does try to disguise this somewhat with fidgety hyperkinetic camerwork, although this proves more irritating than anything else. Masons clear inspiration for The Devil's Chair was the Clive Barker classic Hellraiser (1987) this is even mentioned during one of Andrew Howards voiceover at one point. The Devil's Chair could almost be a low-budget Hellraiser (excepting that Hellraiser was a low-budget film itself). Both films follow a similar plot arc where people activate a device that drags them into a separate dimension where they encounter unworldly demonic figures that then slaughter them. The central upfront idea is nothing particularly original, however what propels The Devil's Chair from being an efficient horror/gore film to the decidedly interesting is the abrupt and ingenious twist that comes in the last 20 minutes. Suddenly, what has up until that point seemed a horror film about a scientific team investigating the occult forces unleashed in an asylum and encountering an artefact that drags them into another dimension where they are slaughtered by a demon is abruptly turned on its head. Here [PLOT SPOILERS] it is revealed that we are in the midst of a The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919) or Shutter Island (2010) type scenario where the other dimensional realm and demon figure are illusions that exist inside Andrew Howards mentally disturbed mind and that he has slaughtered everybody. There is a considerable cleverness to the way the film builds up through Andrew Howards recovery with dire warnings about being dragged back into the situation, leading us to believe that there is an occult menace in the asylum. The writing and wilful misdirection here is extremely clever. The film ends on a memorable gore-drenched bloodbath before a perfect ending where Andrew Howard departs in a car with his illusionary dead girlfriend sitting beside him.
One of the films pluses is Andrew Howard. With 6 foot plus frame, working class accent, shaven bullet head and ice-cold blue eyes, Andrew Howard could almost be a serial killer version of Jason Statham. Since The Devil's Chair, Andrew Howards career has been on the rise, he having appeared in almost all of Adam Masons other films, had bit parts in Guy Ritchies Revolver (2005), Woody Allens Cassandras Dream (2007), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009), Limitless (2011) and a memorable turn with an amazingly convincing Southern accent as the sheriff in the remake of I Spit on Your Grave (2010). Adam Mason and his regular co-writer Simon Boyes deliver some particularly captivating voiceover dialogue for Howard.
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