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Faust: Love of the Damned

Faust: Love of the Damned (2000)

November. 01,2000
|
4.4
| Fantasy Horror Action

An artist sells his soul to the mysterious M in order to get revenge on the people who killed his girlfriend. Soon, he realises everything has a price, and he is transformed into a horned demon with a passion for killing.

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Reviews

Mjeteconer
2000/11/01

Just perfect...

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ThrillMessage
2000/11/02

There are better movies of two hours length. I loved the actress'performance.

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Voxitype
2000/11/03

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Kirandeep Yoder
2000/11/04

The joyful confection is coated in a sparkly gloss, bright enough to gleam from the darkest, most cynical corners.

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hellholehorror
2000/11/05

This is like Wishmaster (1997) but with the devil instead of a malignant genie. The actual monster was seriously cool when it was on the screen but that is for a disappointingly short time. The story was full of twists and interest but something was missing so I found my attention drifting. The ending was great with a big thingy that burnt stuff with wonderfully tacky effects. Not very intense but the ending was worth waiting for.

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BA_Harrison
2000/11/06

Looking to exact revenge on the gangsters who murdered his girlfriend, artist John Jaspers (Mark Frost) strikes a hasty deal with the mysterious 'M' (Andrew Divoff), exchanging his soul for supernatural abilities and a mean set of arm-mounted blades. But in his eagerness, he forgets that it always pays to read the small print before signing a contract, which in this case states that he must continue to kill for M after settling his score. When Jaspers refuses, M has him buried alive, but somehow (details a bit fuzzy here...) the artist comes back from the dead as a demonic being and once again goes looking for retribution.Anyone looking for a faithful adaptation of the classic German legend is going to be majorly disappointed by Brian Yuzna's Faust, which is less a tragic study of moral abandonment, more a diabolical, blood-soaked, logic-free comic-book-style fever-dream packed with hokey gore, heavy metal, surreal effects and nudity. In telling his demented tale, director Brian Yuzna gives viewers lots of insanely OTT action full of severed body parts and slashed throats, while makeup artist Screaming Mad George provides some suitably weird prosthetics work (including one effect that sees a woman reduced to a giant pair of breasts and a huge ass with a face), and voluptuous actress Mònica Van Campen gets naked and has sex a lot. All of this is accompanied by a thundering soundtrack that includes the likes of Fear Factory, Machine Head and Coal Chamber.Literary scholars will most likely be appalled by what they see; students of 'serious' horror will think it churlish; I thought it was one hell of a fun time!7.5 out of 10, rounded up to 8 for IMDb.

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shanathan319
2000/11/07

Does any one realize that this whole Faust idea that this movie and your beloved comics are based off a long play written by an eighteenth century writer over his entire life. That was based off of folk stories that were created in the late Middle Ages. And published versions of these stories dated back to at least 1592. I haven't seen the movie, as a matter of fact, I've just heard of it just within a half-hour before writing this. But it seems you people watching this movie and those who seem to be devoted fans to the comic book series seem to be quite ignorant of how this whole story came about., regardless of whether this movie did really suck or not. The idea of Faust is the idea of a man torn by reason and individuality against the values that society try to blindly install into its citizens, which at the time the idea was conceived would be the influence of the Church and its ideas of how the world works and how people ought to behave.

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Seth Ingram (drworm-1)
2000/11/08

There is not a single original line in Faust: Love of the Damned, and, the truth is, that's not even the worst of it. Faust... is a miasma of eye-rolling sexcapades (dressed up in a way that is clearly meant to seem demonic, but that falls exceedingly short), poor and tired special effects, and a completely incomprehensible plot. Even veteran horror actor Jeffrey Combs of Re-Animator fame can't pull this movie into something watchable, although his sudden turn to the dark side is probably the only good twist in this terrible film. One almost wonders whether Yuzna used some sort of blackmail material to convince Combs to be in this dreadful flick (with an interesting pair of sideburns to boot).Faust... says nothing new about the natures of good and evil or the entity of the devil. In addition, it borders on pornographic with its senseless sex scenes and downright offensive with its portrayal of sexual abuse. Barely redeemable.

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