Devil's Due

    Devil's Due
    2014

    Synopsis

    An unexpected pregnancy takes a terrifying turn for newlyweds Zach and Samantha McCall.

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    Cast

    • Zach GilfordZach McCall
    • Allison MillerSamantha McCall
    • Sam AndersonFather Thomas
    • Catherine KresgeTina
    • Aimee CarreroEmily
    • Griff FurstKeith
    • Geraldine SingerSally
    • Tyler ForrestSteve
    • Julia DentonNatalie
    • Robert BelushiMason

    Recommendations

    • 67

      The Playlist

      If there's a problem that gets in the way of some genuinely scary moments, it's that the filmmakers (all four of them) don't ever give you enough information to invest in the characters.
    • 58

      The A.V. Club

      While it’s generally above-average for this sorry genre, it’s so derivative, in both style and narrative, that there’s still an overwhelming sense of plodding inevitability to the whole affair.
    • 40

      The Telegraph

      Oscillates between the jolting and the absurd, bottoming out with a nonsensical coda.
    • 40

      Empire

      An ordinary, forgettable horror film. Even the Devil deserves more than this.
    • 40

      Time Out London

      Devil’s Due spends far too much time on home movie footage of likeable newlyweds Zach (Zach Gilford) and Samantha McCall (Allison Miller), while neglecting to scare the bejesus out of us.
    • 40

      The Guardian

      It's as substantial as seeing "The Exorcist" redone on Snapchat – and let's not even consider the implication of casting black and Latino performers as Satan's minions, because clearly its makers haven't.
    • 38

      McClatchy-Tribune News Service

      The dialogue is dull, the performances perfunctory and while it is novel to leave out “the explainer” character — that slim hope that a priest, an expert on the Occult or whoever, can give the characters answers — common to this genre, leaving that character out robs the film of pathos and urgency.
    • 30

      Variety

      The film expends plenty of effort crafting a few memorable freakout setpieces and nailing down the logistics of its found-footage camera placement, yet it offers precious little in the way of real scares or engaging characters, and even less in original ideas.