Devil’s Prey


Devil’s Prey 2020

 
IMDb Ratings: 4.0/10
 
Genres: Horror, Mystery, Thriller
 
Language: Hindi(Unofficial VO) + English(ORG)
 
Release Year: 2020

Director: Lincoln Casimir

Stars Cast: Emile Brammer, Leeden Anderson, Emily Battles
 

 Devil’s Prey Screenshots

 

 Devil’s Prey Review

 
Struggling with a painful past, a man who tries to hide his true identity as a serial killer from police detectives who try to catch him slowly begins to mentally expose himself to the stress of everything a couple of angels trying to fight for his eternal soul try to suggest. balance in their will against him.

This was a surprisingly frustrating and problematic endeavor. One of the biggest problems here is the complete confusion that arises from a story that is incredibly involved but has never been given time to resolve itself. The action involving the war between the angels, his past troubles affecting him and the case of the lost child and the investigating police are all thrown at us immediately at the beginning of this one with little lead or construction, making some kind of jarring whiplash-effect trying to keep everything straight. One does not lead to anything else, it just descends upon us without doing anything to separate it all, and given the complexity of the main issues involving both fighting angels and the mental torture of successive assassins, especially these. we need time to find out what is going on. Although this is finally happening and everything is clear, it is not too late and the introduction of everything seems a bit unfocused. That also manages to highlight a few injustices about their personal war going on throughout the film. The fact that an evil demon is trying hard to influence him to benefit himself without the righteous interfering under the command not to make it seem incredibly rational in this process. If the ultimate goal is to save him, then not interfering while the other person is always doing so provides an easy opportunity to be corrupted by the most prominent person in his life and thwart their whole intent to redeem him as an antitrust evil. impact. Moreover, the common mistake associated with this genre is often presented and when nothing is given about why it is as special as it is in their war, forcing them to fight him for no real reason in the billions of other people in the world. . This goes in an unexplained way and could have used something else to put the story together, all of which held this down. There are some interesting features here. The fact that this is built on the subsequent mental illness of a murderer from both his past problems and guilt over what he does is a great point and is made in an impressive way. As already mentioned, all of this is done to clarify the many news lines from later on which gives us as much insight into dementia as we do with implanted ideas or unconventional objects between two angels fighting for his soul in their private battle. As they grow stronger and brighter this impetus grows as these most shocking actions that include eye contact with the grocery store, job breakdown and memorable sequence in the church all contribute to this setup. That also serves a more satisfying conclusion, choosing a more logical bend than the supernatural features presented elsewhere that concludes this with an exciting note, giving you really impressive features.

Rated as Rated / R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.