Devour (film)

Devour

Devour DVD cover
Directed by David Winkler
Produced by Daniel Bigel
Written by Adam Gross
Seth Gross
Starring Jensen Ackles
Shannyn Sossamon
Dominique Swain
William Sadler
Teach Grant
Music by Joseph LoDuca
Cinematography Brian Pearson
Edited by Todd C. Ramsay
Release dates
  • May 31, 2005 (2005-05-31)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Devour is a 2005 horror film directed by David Winkler.

Plot

The story follows Jake Gray (Jensen Ackles), a young man who's been having bizarre visions of murder and self-mutilation, and his experience with a live roleplay-like online game called "The Pathway" (a similar roleplaying as seen in The Game).

Following the deaths of his friends Conrad (Teach Grant) and Dakota (Dominique Swain), who introduced him to the game, Jake soon learns that "The Pathway" is actually being run by a man named Aiden Kater (Martin Cummins) and his band of Devil-worshippers. They've been using it to look for a specific person, even as they manipulate others into killing. As their final acts, the victims of "The Pathway" commit suicide in various gruesome ways.

With help from Marisol (Shannyn Sossamon), a new friend who dabbles in the mystic occult, Jake learns from a man called Ivan Reisz (William Sadler) that his wife, Anne Kilton, and their unborn child were taken by Kater and sacrificed to the devil. Soon after, he tracks down Kater and learns that Anne was not in fact sacrificed to the devil, that she gave birth, and that her child was stolen by mortals, and raised as a human. He is that child, the person whom "The Pathway" was created to find, and Anne is really Satan (devil) herself.

Ultimately, Jake confronts his birth mother (who has killed his adoptive parents) in the very place where he was stolen from her, he then learns that Marisol was, in fact, Satan/Anne. Following his rejection and attempted murder of her, Jake is shown a vision of the night he was born. He awakens covered with blood on the ground the next day, only to be arrested for the murder of his parents. The movie ends with Jake wondering if everything (including Pathway itself) really was not created by his imagination and if he had committed all those murders.

Cast

Reception

Critical reception for Devour has been overwhelmingly negative. It currently holds a rating of 20% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 5 reviews.[1]

References

  1. "Devour (2005)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 5 September 2014.

External links


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