The Devil's 8 (1969)
7/10
The Hateful Eight.
3 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Taking a look at a "Cult Movie" Shout Factory box set that a family friend has recently picked up,I was surprised to find that one of the movies was co-writer's John Milius feature film debut,which led to me getting ready to find out how devilish the 8 could be.

The plot:

Grabbing 6 convicts just before they are sent for a life behind bars,FBI agent Ray Faulkner takes the gang to a remote countryside location.Finding each of them to be confrontational,Faulkner tells the gang that they each have a choice:they can either spend their lives in jail,or get freedom by helping him to take down ruthless Moonshine maker Burl.Tempted by Faulkner's offer,the gang start going after some Moonshine.

View on the film:

Despite being the first movie and working on it as a co-writer (along with Larry Gordon/Willard Huyck & James Gordon White) the screenplay is covered in the paw marks of John Milius.Milius uses the outback location to give an outline to some of his later themes,as the gang find themselves in gritty shootouts whilst trying to get a connection with their wild life surroundings for an advantage on Burl.

Whilst John Milius builds the foundations for his later work,director Burt Topper guzzles Moonshine down and offers a terrific mix of tough men on a mission crime movie with a thigh- tapping Drive-In slide.Helped by Shout Factory giving the title a very good transfer, Topper covers the film in a golden brown which allows for the fights to spark across the screen,and the mistrust that the rest of the gang have for Faulkner (played by a wonderful Christopher George) to be given a rough, rustic atmosphere,as the gang reveal how devilishly hateful the eight can be.
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