Heartland of Darkness (2022) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
A diabolical cult is lurking in a village in central Ohio
Wuchakk26 February 2023
A single man with a teen daughter (Dino Tripodis & Sharon Klopfenstein) moves into a small town outside Columbus where he purchases a newspaper and hires a reporter (Shanna Thomas). Unfortunately, macabre slayings are occurring and they trace them to the town's dubious pastor (Nick Baldasare) and his goons. Queen of the Bs, Linnea Quigley, is on hand as one of the minister's disciples.

"Heartland of Darkness" was shot in 1989 and originally titled "Blood Church," but only a 35-minute workprint was available for promotion. It sat on the shelf (or was lost) for over three decades before post-production was completed with the addition of a few digital effects. It was finally released in late 2022. A similar thing happened to "Grizzly II: The Mutation," although that flick wasn't an Indie like this one.

The story was birthed from the American satanic panic of the 80s, which continued to spread around the globe in the 90s. Movies like "Bay Coven" (1987), "Spellbinder" (1988) and "Race With the Devil" (1975) come to mind, although those had way more funds with which to work.

Yet "Heartland of Darkness" is just as entertaining if you can forgive some lame acting here and there, e.g. The Sheriff. Dino Tripodis (Paul Henson) and Shanna Thomas (Shannon) are actually quite good for a B production while Baldasare (the "reverend") and Quigley tend to ham it up.

Redhead Shanna Thomas stands out on the feminine front. Speaking of which, all three of the women are shown top nude in brief flashes, except for Quigley who, to be expected, basks in showing off her wares.

The gore is quite good for such an old flick, even shocking. There's also some decent action, but Shanna Thomas isn't convincing as a martial arts practitioner in the climax.

At the end of the day this is colorful Indie horror from the late 80s with some questionable acting and predictableness, yet the filmmaking is certainly adequate and there are enough staples of the genre to make it worthwhile for those interested.

The film runs 1 hour, 42 minutes, and, was shot in Granville, Ohio, which is a 20-minute drive east of Columbus, with one sequence filmed in Columbus and other stuff done in Los Angeles.

GRADE: B-/C+
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Lost church of blood.
HumanoidOfFlesh24 August 2010
I managed to see 35 minutes long version of "Blood Church" with Linnea Quigley.The footage is raw,often dark and grainy,but the film looks certainly interesting.It deals with satanic sacrifice,murderous priest,who enjoys sacrificing virgins on his altar of blood and his church of devilish disciples.Sexy horror queen Linnea Quigley appears in three scenes and she is partially nude in two of them.Apparently 35-minutes long print of "Blood Church" was made to send around to potential investors in order to gather additional funding for the film.But the film was never finished or remains unreleased to this day.You can see for example cemetery sex scene between Linnea Quigley and Nick Baldasare or her sleazy death scene.7 out of 10,because "Blood Church" had a lot of potential.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
The Long and Winding Road Through the Heartland
thomandybish-151147 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
From what I can tell, the story of this lost film's eventual release over 30 years after its production is almost more interesting than the film itself. A cautionary tale about the pitfalls of independent filmmaking, that story has all been covered in the trivial section. I'm here to chew bubblegum and review this flick, and I'm all out of bubblegum.

"Heartland of Darkness" (or "Fallen Angels" or "Blood Church"--another danger of independent filmmaking seems to be that anybody can re-titled your movie at will) has a promising premise. A former report from a major newspaper moves himself and his daughter to Copperton, OH--the living embodiment of apple pie, MId-America. However, below the wholesome facade of this little burgh lies an awful secret--the town has been infiltrated by Satanists who are perpetrating some grisly murders, led by the charismatic Reverend Donovan, played with gleeful aplomb by Nick Baldasare. Baldasare looks like any number of interchangeable actors who played boyfriend or college kid cannon fodder in slasher movies of the era, and I for one think this is an advantage. It makes perfect sense, as there's nothing particularly striking about him to draw attention to his evil acts--that, and the fact that he's a pastor in a small town at a time when people still respected clergy enough to not question them--makes his takeover all the more chilling. But this is exploitation, folks, so Baldasare doesn't miss a chance to ham it up, quoting Bible verses and gesticulating in a most grandiose manner during his monologues. Others have noted the era in which the movie was made as being rife with "satanic panic" (in part due to some hysteria drummed up by media coverage of deaths or suicides reportedly caused by the influence of role-playing games) which definitely is an influence, but the movie could also be viewed as a treatise on conspiracy thinking/paranoia (the Satanists have infiltrated their way almost to the top of state government and stage an assassination to keep their secret), as well as shifting gears into a decent action movie in the third act, which makes up for some of the weak writing/terrible acting in the first.

Prior films have explored Satanism as a conspiracy to corrupt normal life --look at "Rosemary's Baby" or "The Brotherhood of Satan", both of which were lensed roughly 20 years before this effort. Of the two "The Brotherhood of Satan" is much more similar in concept--a family, travelling through an unfamiliar town, gets tangled up with the Satanists who run the place, particularly the town's doctor, who is engaged in some scheme to transfer the souls of aging Satanists into the bodies of the town's children. While the slow burn of suspense and the eventual reveal is more skillfully handled, there is still this concept of a bucolic, supposedly safe small town masking this horrific evil and snuffing out any outside influences. The Satanists kidnapping the daughter kicks off the switch into Action mode (Praise be), but it also causes the lead character's motivation for fighting the evil Rev to change; he's no longer a crusading reporter or soldier for goodness, but a Dad fighting for the life of his child. That is what motivates him to fight to the end, including the false ending and the true one, the one that includes a showdown in the church where the Rev dies in a most symbolic way. In short, the movie starts out weak and moves to a somewhat dull middle but pays off in the end. Just hold out till the third act; therein lies the goods.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
No, it's not Shakespeare, but...
RennerFilms30 December 2023
As an independent filmmaker too (I have also directed Linnea Quigley) I was really impressed with this. The word "ambitious" keeps coming to mind. Explosions, car chases, multiple locations, assassinations, big cast... not your typical low-budget indie film. The behind the scenes extras are just as interesting as the film. The acting is average but the cast give it their best, and the female reporter and the "daughter" (who is clearly 20-something) are easy on the eyes. Oh, and Linnea too, of course. Decent amounts of blood/gore and bare flesh. Overall the cult story was fun with a couple of twists, and a (mostly) happy ending. The Visual Vengeance limited edition bluray is highly recommended.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
AWESOME
BandSAboutMovies16 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In the small town of Copperton, Ohio, Paul Henson (Dino Tripodis), a former big-city journalist, buys a small local newspaper. He quickly falls into a wide-reaching conspiracy of ritualistic199 murder and cult mind control when he discovers that the entire town may be under the spell of Reverend Donovan (Nick Baldasare, Beyond Dream's Door), Reverend Kane (John Dunleavy) and their flock. As the clues and corpses pile up, Henson and his family are thrust into a life-or-death struggle to expose the truth and stop the demonic cabal's reign of evil.

Shot in 1989 by director Eric Swelstad on 16mm film and lost in obscurity and distribution false starts for over 30 years, Heartland of Darkness finally arrives on home video for the very first time and is packed with bonus features that spotlight the original creators and document the film's long history and final completion.

Filmed as Fallen Angels, which was changed to Blood Church and then Heartland of Darkness, Swelstad abandoned the project before finding a distributor. Over the years various producers including Jim Wynorski, Rob Spera and Jody Savin wanted to release the film, but nothing happened. It almost came out from Media Blasters in 2004 before Visual Vengeance became the company to finish it and get it out into the world.

If that doesn't sell you, Linnea Quigley plays an evil teacher.

I have no idea why this ever got lost. It's a perfect early 90s direct to video horror film, but perhaps even better than the other movies you would have found on the shelf. Swlstad has a great eye for filmmaking and puts story over simple gore.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A slightly problematic if still enjoyable genre effort
kannibalcorpsegrinder24 December 2022
After arriving in a small town, the owner of a local newspaper uncovers a conspiracy involving a slew of strange murders around the area revolving around a fanatical preacher that supposedly leads a Satanic cult, and the more he spends time there the more he uncovers their ruthless plans.

Overall, this was a generally enjoyable if somewhat flawed effort. Among the brighter parts of this one come from the stellar setup involving how the cult operates and carries out its activities that offer up their gradual discovery. With the series of murders appearing as soon as he gets there and the inquisitive nature of his proposition to get the paper running immediately resulting in publishing the articles that bring about the furor over their instances looking into what's going on, this all generates the kind of engaging setup that becomes far more immersive over time. The gradual reveal of the power and control the cult leader brandishes over everyone else, from their refusal to help him uncover the truth to the type of help willing to carry on the secret activities of the cult keeps this one moving along nicely building the mystery as to what's going on. That allows for some decent scenes here with the priest exerting his influence and control over others attempting to stop them, featuring some decent Action scenes throughout the town to accomplish this which has some exciting aspects here. There are some issues to be had with this one. The biggest problem is the highly convoluted and twisted nature of how the case gets unraveled since it seems almost as though he shows up at the town and things go South. Rather than slowly get indoctrinated or uncover the truth through a gradual slow-burning series of events, everything seems to get shoved into his face the second he arrives bringing about a rather unlikely scenario where he's allowed to roam free despite knowing what's going on from the start. For a cult trying to keep their presence a secret would not go through the move they do, this becomes quite frustrating that they would go through what they do as everything is so open that the utterly lame attempts at covering everything up only reveal what's going on further with how lackluster they are at concealing everything. This is almost hand-in-hand with the overlong finale which is unnecessarily overdone and features several rushed and underwhelming situations merely to get a bigger payoff but comes up short which all end up bringing this one down.

Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Language, Violence, and Nudity.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed