The Demon Disorder (2024) by Steven Boyle


Director: Steven Boyle
Year: 2024
Country: Australia
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Supernatural

Plot:
Trying to move on in life, estranged brothers living on a ranch in the middle of the countryside are brought back together when a series of incidents with a family member are eerily reminiscent of what happened to their father when he got possessed by a demon, forcing them to believe it’s returned.

Review:

This was a decent enough if somewhat flawed genre effort. Among its better qualities is the strong startup that provides a solid base for the demonic activity to follow once everything is revealed. The early setpieces involving the brothers reconnecting and managing to come together again to investigate the strange circumstances surrounding their family with the symptoms resembling what happened with their father that allows for their reunion to take place gives this a decent enough starting point. Tying in the idea of the unnatural behavior and violent outbursts that signal something is wrong, setting the brothers up on their quest to figure out what’s going on ultimately leads to the overt possession and ultimate revenge plot at the center of everything, giving this a solid overall setup.

On top of that, when dealing with the grisly aftereffects of the possession, the film scores incredibly well as there’s some gruesome work here. The idea of the calling card for everything taking on the form of a spreading and bloody wound on the body leaves quite an impression with the effects going for goopy body-horror style undertones. With the big confrontations in the final featuring even more great effects-work as the practical nature of everything here including demonic beings emerging from the victim’s bodies, the graphic contortions and dismemberments that occur with the possessed in control of the body, and the general grotesque appearance that signals the possession has taken place helping to make the action inside the restricted location even more potent with everything here coming across well enough to have a lot to like.

There are some issues with this one that hold it down. One of the biggest drawbacks is the overly familiar and cliched storyline involving long-buried family drama and grief manifesting itself once again. This is a familiar route that plenty of other features have gone with as they try to make the idea of generational curses and long-hidden trauma mean something but it’s just not different enough with the material to make much of an impression. Everything is by-the-numbers and routine to the point of making it feel far more dragged out in the beginning than it actually is since everything is building to the point of genuinely chilling horror elements in the final half. However, going once again with the route it halts the moment of this one at the very beginning and makes for a bit of a difficult watch getting into things with this type of setup. These are the main detrimental factors involved with this one.


Overview: **.5/5
Overly familiar but still enjoyable enough, this one is fine overall even with plenty of elements that will hold it down for viewers that have seen plenty of this family trama gener efforts. Give it a shot if you’re not that bothered with it’s negatives or are genuinely intrigued by the material heer while most others out there should heed caution with this one.

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