• Latest
  • Trending
Late Night with the Devil Review

Late Night with the Devil Review: Raising Hell on Live Television

Sniper The Last Stand Review

Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

Last Bullet Review

Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

PaperKlay Review

PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

Swing Bout Review

Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

squid game season 3

Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

8 hours ago
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

8 hours ago
Michelle Pfeiffer

Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

8 hours ago
Candice King

Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

8 hours ago
Meet the Parents

Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

8 hours ago
Dalia and the Red Book Review

Dalia and the Red Book Review: Writing Your Own Escape from Grief

Britain and the Blitz Review

Britain and the Blitz Review: A Beautiful, Incomplete Truth

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Saturday, June 28, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    squid game season 3

    Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

    Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

    Michelle Pfeiffer

    Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

    Candice King

    Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

    Meet the Parents

    Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

    Akira Warner Bros

    Warner Bros. Lets Akira Rights Expire After Two-Decade Struggle

    Adam Sandler and Jerry Bruckheimer

    Sandler, Bruckheimer Turn NHL Draft Into Hollywood Showcase

    Matthew Goode

    Matthew Goode’s ‘Too Dark’ Bond Pitch Sheds Light on 007 Reboot Debate

    because shes worth it

    Five-Lion Triumph for L’Oréal’s Ilon Specht Documentary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Sniper The Last Stand Review

    Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

    Last Bullet Review

    Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

    Swing Bout Review

    Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

    Dalia and the Red Book Review

    Dalia and the Red Book Review: Writing Your Own Escape from Grief

    Britain and the Blitz Review

    Britain and the Blitz Review: A Beautiful, Incomplete Truth

    Peg O' My Heart Review

    Peg O’ My Heart Review: Strong Acting Can’t Save a Clumsy Script

    Hats Off to Love Review (1)

    Hats Off to Love Review: Checking the Boxes with Style

    I'm Beginning to See the Light Review (1)

    I’m Beginning to See the Light Review: A Russian Soul in an American Fable

  • Game Reviews
    PaperKlay Review

    PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

    Projected Dreams Review

    Projected Dreams Review: Illuminating a Beautiful Story

    Tom Clancy's The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review

    Tom Clancy’s The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review: A Nostalgic But Flawed Homecoming

    9 Kings Review

    9 Kings Review: Seven Monarchs, Endless Strategic Possibilities

    Rematch Review

    Rematch Review: Sloclap’s Ambitious Football Experiment Falls Short of Goals

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    squid game season 3

    Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

    Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

    Michelle Pfeiffer

    Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

    Candice King

    Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

    Meet the Parents

    Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

    Akira Warner Bros

    Warner Bros. Lets Akira Rights Expire After Two-Decade Struggle

    Adam Sandler and Jerry Bruckheimer

    Sandler, Bruckheimer Turn NHL Draft Into Hollywood Showcase

    Matthew Goode

    Matthew Goode’s ‘Too Dark’ Bond Pitch Sheds Light on 007 Reboot Debate

    because shes worth it

    Five-Lion Triumph for L’Oréal’s Ilon Specht Documentary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Sniper The Last Stand Review

    Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

    Last Bullet Review

    Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

    Swing Bout Review

    Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

    Dalia and the Red Book Review

    Dalia and the Red Book Review: Writing Your Own Escape from Grief

    Britain and the Blitz Review

    Britain and the Blitz Review: A Beautiful, Incomplete Truth

    Peg O' My Heart Review

    Peg O’ My Heart Review: Strong Acting Can’t Save a Clumsy Script

    Hats Off to Love Review (1)

    Hats Off to Love Review: Checking the Boxes with Style

    I'm Beginning to See the Light Review (1)

    I’m Beginning to See the Light Review: A Russian Soul in an American Fable

  • Game Reviews
    PaperKlay Review

    PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

    Projected Dreams Review

    Projected Dreams Review: Illuminating a Beautiful Story

    Tom Clancy's The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review

    Tom Clancy’s The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review: A Nostalgic But Flawed Homecoming

    9 Kings Review

    9 Kings Review: Seven Monarchs, Endless Strategic Possibilities

    Rematch Review

    Rematch Review: Sloclap’s Ambitious Football Experiment Falls Short of Goals

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Late Night with the Devil Review

The Gone Review: When Celtic Noir Meets Māori Mysticism

Palm Royale Review: Opulence Meets Subversion in Apple TV+'s Soapy Gem

Home Entertainment Movies

Late Night with the Devil Review: Raising Hell on Live Television

An Audacious Descent into Supernatural Pandemonium and Media Debauchery

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

Late Night with the Devil is a devilishly entertaining horror satire that dares to merge the spooky and the showbiz. This audacious genre mashup from Australian writer-director duo Colin and Cameron Cairnes unleashes supernatural terror amidst the bright lights and razzle-dazzle of a live 1970s television broadcast.

The year is 1977, the night is Halloween, and struggling late-night talk show host Jack Delroy is desperate for a ratings win. In his relentless pursuit of success, he invites an assortment of otherworldly guests – a self-proclaimed psychic, a professional skeptic, a parapsychologist, and most disturbingly, a young girl seemingly possessed by demonic forces. What begins as a shameless bid for viewership quickly descends into an unholy nightmare.

The Cairnes brothers merge the disparate worlds of horror and vintage TV entertainment with devilish flair. Drawing clear inspiration from blasphemous classics like The Exorcist while channeling the frenetic energy of an actual live taping, Late Night with the Devil is a startlingly fresh take on satanic shockers. With its era-specific production design and tongue-in-cheek satirical bent, it emerges as a frightfully fun love letter to the golden age of broadcast television…with a singularly sinister twist.

Delirious Descent Into Devilish Desperation

At the center of Late Night with the Devil’s descent into madness is Jack Delroy, the charismatic yet increasingly unhinged host of the flagging talk show Night Owls. Portrayed with remarkable depth by David Dastmalchian, Jack is a man driven to despair after the devastating loss of his beloved wife. In a last-ditch effort to resuscitate his fading career, he devises a Halloween special that teeters on the edge of unholiness.

For this unholy occasion, Jack assembles a motley crew of outlandish guests linked to the supernatural. There’s Christou, a self-professed psychic plagued by disturbing visions; Carmichael, an arrogant illusionist-turned-professional skeptic; and Dr. June Ross-Mitchell, a parapsychologist promoting her book on satanic cults. Most alarming of all is Lilly, Dr. Ross-Mitchell’s patient – a seemingly sweet young girl concealing a terrifying secret. According to the doctor, Lilly is possessed by a demonic entity she calls “Mr. Wriggles.”

What begins as a shameless ratings ploy quickly spirals into unrestrained pandemonium. Strange phenomena start manifesting on the set – eerie voices, levitating objects, and a crisis of belief that pits the skeptics against the true believers. Jack presses on shamelessly, desperate for the show to be a smash despite his colleagues’ increasing unease.

As the broadcast barrels towards its cataclysmic conclusion, an unholy evil is roused from its slumber. The entity’s malevolent influence casts a creeping sense of dread over the production, culminating in an explosive final act of sheer, unrestrained horror. Jack’s egomaniacal hunger for success unlocks a doorway to unspeakable terrors that even he may be powerless to contain.

Hellish Homage to Vintage Horrors

The Cairnes brothers prove to be remarkably skilled pupas, weaving together a deft homage to vintage horror classics while injecting fresh, contemporary flair. Their painstaking recreation of a 1970s television studio is nothing short of revelatory – the garish color palette, the wood-paneled sets, the painfully retro fashions…it all coalesces into a richly immersive time capsule.

Late Night with the Devil Review

Beyond the period trappings, the filmmaking itself is a masterclass in building dread through clever cinematic trickery. The Cairnes deftly intermingle different photography techniques, seamlessly cutting between sleek broadcast footage and gritty behind-the-scenes chaos captured with a provocative handheld approach. They even shift aspect ratios at key moments, visualizing the stark divide between the polished on-air persona and the escalating reality.

These stylistic flourishes are more than just gimmicks – they’re instruments fine-tuned to manipulate the audience’s sense of perspective and unease. The velvet curtain separating showmanship from spirituality grows increasingly tattered as the film hurtles towards its delirious climax. The illusion of control slowly disintegrates, reflecting Jack’s frenzied psychological downward spiral.

To bring their unholy visions to life, the Cairnes expertly blend old-school practical effects with modern visual trickery. Prosthetic creatures ooze across the screen, while supernatural forces manifest as both corporeal abominations and diabolical hallucinations slithering at the corner of the frame. It’s a masterful fusion of analog and digital wizardry that remains true to the era while never letting the seams show.

Diabolical Delroy Drives Demented Delirium

At the malevolent core of Late Night with the Devil lies a truly possessed performance by David Dastmalchian as the ill-fated Jack Delroy. Dastmalchian fully inhabits the increasingly manic mindset of a once-respected TV personality slowly losing his grip on reality. With wild eyes and a smarmy smile masking inner anguish, he charts Jack’s delirious descent from showman to conduit for the unholy.

Late Night with the Devil Review

Dastmalchian’s unhinged intensity is perfectly counterbalanced by Ian Bliss as the smugly skeptical Carmichael. Bliss’ droll, almost bored delivery razor-sharply cuts through the growing chaos, boldly challenging any notion of supernatural interference. His grounded presence amidst the escalating pandemonium makes the horrific events even more unsettling.

Equally unnerving is Laura Gordon’s turn as Dr. June Ross-Mitchell, whose exploitative parapsychological research profoundly unsettles in its reckless arrogance. Gordon’s glacial exterior cracks with telling subtlety as things spiral out of control, exposing the deeply human terror festering beneath her academic veneer.

But it’s young Ingrid Torelli as the possessed Lilly who truly chills to the bone. One moment an unassuming innocent, the next a conduit for unfathomable evil, Torelli’s seamless transformations are the stuff of nightmares. Her wild eyes and guttural growls will haunt long after the credits roll.

The entire ensemble shines in capturing the kinetic frenzy of a live television production devolving into anarchy. What begins as controlled, professional showmanship amongst the cast and crew rapidly degenerates into sheer, unbridled pandemonium. It’s a masterful actualization of humanity’s loss of control in the face of overwhelming malevolent forces.

Devilish Descent into Media Madness

Beneath its lurid otherworldly thrills, Late Night with the Devil operates as a biting satirical dissection of society’s unholy obsession with media spectacle and fame at all costs. Jack Delroy’s desperation to revive his flagging television career becomes a scathing allegory for the Faustian bargains struck by those ravenous for the spotlight’s alluring glow.

Late Night with the Devil Review

The film pulls no punches in portraying the grotesque depths to which showbiz opportunists will stoop for ratings and relevance. Jack’s eager exploitation of the occult and suffering – be it a psychic’s mental breakdown or a possessed girl’s torment – reflects the ruthless manipulation peddled by unscrupulous media purveyors. His incessant pandering to the live studio audience’s desire for bigger, better freakshow acts disturbingly mirrors how modern influencers manufacture outrage to feed our cultural appetite for viral content.

Late Night with the Devil revels in exposing this toxic feedback loop, illustrated through the “truth vs. trickery” conflict embodied by the skeptic Carmichael’s furious debunking efforts. The eternal tension between what we desire to believe and cold, hard reality is savagely lampooned, casting humanity as willing participants in our own mass delusion. We so desperately crave the illusion of mystique and the supernatural that we cast aside all rationality and consume whatever lurid fantasies are spoon-fed to us.

By fusing satanic shocks with media satire, the film compounds its indictment of the masses’ eager consumption of metaphorical snake oil from tin-pot purveyors of evil. As the nightmare escalates to apocalyptic heights, Late Night’s deranged funhouse mirror reflects our society’s grotesque willingness to be corrupted and enthralled by the nefarious and sensational – all for one short-lived sugar rush of fame and spectacle.

Deliciously Devilish Delight

Late Night with the Devil is a wickedly entertaining romp that fuses satanic scares with deliriously sharp satire. The Cairnes brothers strike a devilishly deft balance, serving up an engaging horror/dark comedy hybrid that keeps audiences both jumping from fright and howling with laughter at the skewering of media excess.

Late Night with the Devil Review

As a period horror piece, it revels in its 1970s aesthetics and tropes without ever devolving into mere pastiche. The retro charms are impeccably recreated butanchored by genuine thrills and an undercurrent of sardonic social commentary. As for the satire itself, the barbs aimed at showbiz insincerity and sensationalism hit bullseye after bullseye with merciless precision.

For horror aficionados craving unique premises and fans of pitch-black media satires like Network or satirical shockers such as Scream, Late Night with the Devil will surely enthrall. Its blend of old-school supernatural spooks and no-holds-barred lampooning of society’s hunger for lurid spectacle places it in a class of its own within the genre hellscape.

While the frenetic final act arguably sacrifices some of the nuance for sheer demented fury, the film remains an audacious creative swing that connects more often than not. A delightfully deranged dissection of humanity’s desperation for fame and our endless capacity for self-delusion, Late Night emerges as one of the most electrifying entries in the recent generation of smarter, more subversive horror filmmaking.

The Review

Late Night with the Devil

8 Score

To conclude, Late Night with the Devil is a thrillingly subversive horror satire that grips from its ominous opening straight through to the deliriously demented climax. With biting social commentary layered amidst brilliant performances and dazzling technical flair, the Cairnes brothers have conjured a devilishly entertaining descent into media madness and the darkest depths of showbiz opportunism. While not entirely flawless, the film's ingenious melding of supernatural chills and incisive cultural critique more than compensates for the occasional lapse into gratuitous chaos. For horror fans burned out on tired tropes, or anyone starved for unique genre premises executed with intelligence and style, this devilish delight simply must be experienced.

PROS

  • Brilliant satirical blend of horror and media satire
  • Excellent lead performance by David Dastmalchian as Jack Delroy
  • Impeccable recreation of a 1970s TV studio and aesthetics
  • Clever filmmaking techniques like aspect ratio shifts, mixing footage styles
  • Biting social commentary on society's hunger for spectacle
  • Creative and unique horror premise centered around a possessed TV broadcast
  • Impressive practical and visual effects

CONS

  • Final act arguably gets a bit too frenetic and loses some nuance
  • Some of the supporting characters could have been fleshed out more
  • A few of the satirical elements veer into over-the-top territory
  • Doesn't maintain the dread/tension as consistently as it could

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Cameron CairnesColin CairnesDavid DastmalchianFayssal BazziFeaturedHorrorIan BlissLate Night with the DevilLaura Gordon
Previous Post

The Gone Review: When Celtic Noir Meets Māori Mysticism

Next Post

Palm Royale Review: Opulence Meets Subversion in Apple TV+’s Soapy Gem

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Smoke Review

    Smoke Review: The Year’s Most Unpredictable and Unsettling Show

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alma and the Wolf Review: Ethan Embry Shines in a Flawed Fever Dream

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Marshmallow Review: These Woods Hide Unexpected Secrets

    4 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Waterfront Review: Kevin Williamson’s Return to Murky Family Waters

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Heads of State Review
Movies

Heads of State Review: Elba and Cena Carry the Ticket

13 hours ago
Squid Game Season 3 Review
Entertainment

Squid Game Season 3 Review: No Happy Endings Here

1 day ago
Love Island USA Season 7 Review
Entertainment

Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

2 days ago
The Bear Season 4 Review
Entertainment

The Bear Season 4 Review: A Contemplative, Cathartic Final Course

2 days ago
Surviving Ohio State Review
Movies

Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version