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DUST DEVIL (DVD)
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Like the “Cannibal Holocaust” boxed set, this is well worth the money because it gives film collectors something to really bite on with a wonderfully constructed library of goodies with extras, booklets, production diaries, and even a “Dust Devil” comic book. Chucking almost thirty bucks on this won’t incite guilt, because supplies will not last, and it will be a rare find, eventually. Much of the story of Dust Devil reminded me of “Riders of the Storm” from the Doors. He’s a monster of a man on a road who will mutilate anyone who decides to pick him up. Stanley’s film is shot in an orange glow that creates a “Dune” landscape and accentuates the barren wasteland upon which our Dust Devil preys.
He’s an utterly memorable horror villain as he commits these dark ceremonies, and listens to the road for oncoming drivers, then takes the souls from the miserable and unloved. Stanley’s direction is fantastic providing some of the most amazing wide shots ever filmed. In one scene, the character Wendy and Dust Devil kiss along a canyon while the camera swoops around them dramatically. Wendy has just left her abusive husband and is now on the open road. After picking up Dust Devil, they begin to form a relationship even though she has no idea what utter danger she’s in. After discovering his mementos from his victims, she narrowly escapes his attacks and flees, but using his dark magic, he’s going to make her escape truly impossible. Meanwhile, Wendy’s husband forms an uneasy partnership with an officer tracking Dust Devil. Zakes Mokae is a sort of Loomis presence who delves deep into the monster’s past, and will stop at nothing to destroy him. Stanley relies on much of the settings of sand, dunes, mountains, and peaks to create a sense of the barren and void, a world where Dust Devil reigns and controls without hope of outwitting him. He has powers, and he’s utterly relentless, and Stanley lets us explore him while keeping him an enigma. “Dust Devil” is a surreal experience, but it’s also one truly underrated piece of work.
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