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DEVIL
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Jacob Vargas brings his usual down to Earth acting prowess to the sharp cast as the theistic Ramirez who is one of the first to detect a demonic presence in the cart, and immediately is convinced that this accident and technical foul up is actually a lunch date for the devil. As with Shyamalan's trademark style, "Devil" has a twist to it, and what a whopper of a punch to the gut it is as writer Brian Nelson builds up to an explosive reveal all the while alluding throughout the story that what we're seeing is not what we should be believing. "There's a reason why we're the audience," Ramirez insists to Bowden as they watch the body count increase among the increasingly horrified and paranoid denizens. All the while the mystery of who among these men and women are Satan is left in the air as Nelson dabbles in realms of sin, clues to a potential twist to this event, and offers up the allusion throughout that maybe the devil is merely just a metaphor for someone on the elevator who is on a mission none of the characters are aware of. As with most of the supernatural films delving in the realm of theism, Nelson and director Dowdle ponder on the themes of fate, karma, and deception, all the while exploring the notion that the devil resides where hate and violence dwell. "Devil" is a classic claustrophobic horror film relying on closed in spaces, and plays on light and sound to keep the audience struggling to make sense along with the passengers all the while anxiously trying to figure out who in this cart is a hapless traveler, and who is pure evil incarnate. The answers are much more complex than the trailers would have you believe.
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