Demon Knight
Tales from the Crypt Presents: Demon Knight is a 1995 American horror comedy film directed by Ernest Dickerson from a screenplay by Mark Bishop, Ethan Reiff and Cyrus Voris. It stars Billy Zane, William Sadler, Jada Pinkett, Brenda Bakke, C. C. H. Pounder, Dick Miller, and Thomas Haden Church.
Demon Knight is a feature-length film presented by the HBO series Tales from the Crypt, and features scenes with the Crypt Keeper at the film's beginning and ending.
The film was met with mostly mixed reviews. It was followed by a second standalone Tales from the Crypt film, Bordello of Blood.
Plot
The film has a wraparound intro and outro by the Crypt Keeper, who states that the story centers upon an isolated area in New Mexico, where several people live in a decommissioned church converted into a boarding house. One of its residents, Willy the local drunk, has brought home a drifter named Frank Brayker, who was recently in a car crash that, unbeknownst to Willy, was caused by a powerful demon in human form, The Collector.The Collector follows Brayker to the house after possessing the local townspeople. He initially tries to obtain the artifact via trickery, only to turn to violence when that fails. Brayker secures the house by using an artifact containing the blood of Jesus Christ. The home's occupants, which include a convict on work release named Jeryline, start plotting an escape route that would require them to utilize abandoned mining tunnels that run underneath the house and entire town. During this Brayker explains that his artifact is actually one of seven keys that demons used to focus the power of the cosmos into their hands. His key is the last one they need to obtain, requiring the protection of unageing guardians. Each guardian refills the artifact with their own blood once they die, so that the next guardian will have a steady supply of blood.
The escape attempt proves to be unsuccessful, however the survivors discover a young boy named Danny taking refuge in the tunnels and bring him back to the boarding house. As the night progresses the survivors are picked off one by one until only Jeryline, Danny, and Brayker are left alive. The Collector then possesses Danny and mortally wounds Brayker, forcing Jeryline to kill the boy. Before he dies Brayker initiates Jeryline as a guardian of the key. This deactivates all of the wards that Brayker set up, allowing The Collector access to the home. The Collector easily obtains the key from Jeryline and offers to spare her by letting her remain at his side. When she doesn't reply he tries to attack her, only for her to spit blood from the key in his face, causing him to revert to his actual demon form before being destroyed.
In the morning Jeryline refills the key with Brayker's blood and leaves town. As she leaves Jeryline spots a new demon, who she realizes will pursue her just as The Collector pursued Brayker. In a post-credits scene, the Crypt Keeper announces a sequel titled Dead Easy: also known as ''Fat Tuesday.''
Cast
- Billy Zane as The Collector
- William Sadler as Frank Brayker
- Jada Pinkett as Jeryline
- Thomas Haden Church as Roach
- C. C. H. Pounder as Irene
- John Kassir as voice of The Crypt Keeper
- * Brock Winkless as The Crypt Keeper's puppeteer
- Brenda Bakke as Cordelia
- Dick Miller as Uncle Willy
- Gary Farmer as Deputy Bob
- Ryan O'Donohue as Danny
- Charles Fleischer as Wally
- John Schuck as Sheriff Tupper
- Sherrie Rose as Wanda
- Chasey Lain as Party Babe
- Traci Bingham as Party Babe
- Mark David Kennerly as Other Collector
- Tim DeZarn as Homer
- John Larroquette as Slasher
Production
Next, the script wound up in the hands of Pumpkinhead screenwriter Mark Carducci, who sat on it for several years before it was given to Pet Sematary director Mary Lambert. Lambert had some radical ideas for the script, including casting an African American as Brayker to create a theme that the oppressed people of Earth were also its saviors. Once Lambert went on to direct Pet Sematary Two, which was a theatrical bomb, she could not get people to invest in the film.
The script later went to Charles Band's Full Moon Features, but budgetary constraints held up the production in limbo. When it finally made its way onto desks at Joel Silver's Silver Pictures, it was optioned to be the second in a trilogy of Tales from the Crypt theatrical spin-offs. Universal Pictures executives thought the script had more potential than the other two films, and the film was quickly sent into production with a tentative release date of Halloween 1994.
At this point, two versions of the script were created to solve budgetary problems: one with demons and one without. In the latter, the Collector was a Bible salesman who was using a legion of fellow salesman clad in black suits and sunglasses as his minions. A film called Demon Knight with demons that looked like killer yuppies made everyone nervous, so Universal pitched in some additional money to get some demons on the screen.