B Movie Nation

Foundational Cinema

B Movie News

The Night God Screamed (1971)

This unimaginably obscure gem of horror perfectly epitomizes why I, and surely many regular members of this website with me, absolutely worship the 70’s decade! “The Night God Screamed” is genuinely creepy without there being much of a budget for make-up effects, the concept is very original and I even daresay unique, the tone throughout the whole film is devastating and grim, the acting performances are far better than they have any right to be and – even though it didn’t even need one – the script provides a very clever and almost unpredictable twist near the end. Quite a number of 70’s horror movies revolved on satanic cults and devil worshiping (“Enter the Devil”, “The Devil’s Rain”, “Race with the Devil”…), but this film centers, or at least partially centers, on the members of a fanatic Catholic movement and I assure you these Jesus freaks are equally uncanny as Satanists; if not uncannier. Billy Joe, a self-acclaimed prophet oddly resembling Jesus Christ himself, and his herd of brainwashed disciples crucify a preacher before the eyes of his poor and defenseless wife Fanny. The woman testifies in court and the culprits are sentenced to death, but naturally not before Billy Joe swears he’ll avenge himself. A certain time later, Fanny becomes stalked and terrorized by religious maniacs, not coincidentally whilst she’s babysitting the (adolescent) kids of the judge that sentenced the verdict. In case of movies like “The Night God Screamed”, the lack of budget is actually the biggest trump. Director Lee Madden obviously searched for different ways to create suspense and an atmosphere of disturbance, other than the usual visual shocks effects and grisly murders, and he definitely succeeded! The remote rural settings are sublime, the music is chilling and all the characters are terrifically cast. Jeanne Crain is excellent as the dame in distress and especially the Jesus freak dude is supremely eerie. But, undeniably, the biggest triumph here remains the simple yet effective story. “The Night God Screamed” doesn’t rely on zombies, vampires or supernatural phenomena. The menace here comes from seemingly normal human beings, with their unpredictable moves and dark twisty minds. It’s a truly great film, and I know it’s difficult to track down, but luckily enough the people looking for this type of cinematic gold are very persistent.