witchcraft horror films

witchcraft horror films
witchcraft horror films

scene from a horror movie where woman has sex with satan?

ok...the scene from the movie i remember which i saw when i was a child was ..like this huge satan having sex with a normal sized woman on a stone slab while druid types surrounded them in the woods i think...there is also a scene where a village in burned down and everyone is slaughtered something to do with witchcraft...can anyone help me remember this film!? thanks =)
i dont think its rosemary's baby since the scene took place in a sort of garden and the ''satan'' in the scene was large and had a very demonic form and..wow that goodfight web site lol

In Rosemary's Baby, the husband makes a deal for Satan to have sex with his wife, and make her pregnant, for his success.

I think the sex scene was in another apartment, through the secret door in the closet.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I went to the site that I will be posting, and went through alot of movies, and got tired of them, sorry, but I am not into satan, but the site is:

www.goodfight.org/a_v_hollywoodswitchinghour.html

I hope you find what you are looking for.

.
aa

The Witches of Eastwick (Keepcase) The Witches of Eastwick (Keepcase)
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $3.66
Used From: $3.65
Average Rating:

Jack Nicholson was born to play the devil, and in George Miller's adaptation of John Updike's novel he plays it for all he's worth. As a wolfish womanizer summoned by three bored women in a picturesque New England town, he's sating all of his appetites with a rakish grin. Cher, Susan Sarandon, and Michelle Pfeiffer play the women who discover their untapped magical powers by accident. The smart and sexy singles, out of place in the conservatism of their village, find happiness, however briefly, in the arms and bed of the libidinous devil, but he's got his own ulterior motives. Miller revels in the sensual display of sex, food, and magic, whipping up a storm of effects that finally get out of hand in an overblown ending. It's a handsome film with strong performances all around, but the mix of anarchic comedy and supernatural horror doesn't always gel and Miller seems to lose the plot in his zeal for cinematic excitement. The performances ultimately keep the film aloft: the hedonistic joy that Nicholson celebrates with every leering gaze and boorish vulgarity is almost enough to make bad form and chauvinism cool. --Sean Axmaker

A devilishly attractive man who can charm anyone arrives in town where three women are looking for Mr. Right, at a very suspicious time.

The Witches of Eastwick The Witches of Eastwick
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $2.70
Used From: $1.65
Average Rating:

A devilishly attractive man who can charm anyone arrives in town where three women are looking for Mr. Right, at a very suspicious time.Item Type: DVD MovieItem Rating: RStreet Date: 09/06/05Wide Screen: yesDirector Cut: noSpecial Edition: noLanguage: ENGLISHForeign Film: noSubtitles: noDubbed: noFull Frame: noRe-Release: noPackaging: Sleeve

Jack Nicholson was born to play the devil, and in George Miller's adaptation of John Updike's novel he plays it for all he's worth. As a wolfish womanizer summoned by three bored women in a picturesque New England town, he's sating all of his appetites with a rakish grin. Cher, Susan Sarandon, and Michelle Pfeiffer play the women who discover their untapped magical powers by accident. The smart and sexy singles, out of place in the conservatism of their village, find happiness, however briefly, in the arms and bed of the libidinous devil, but he's got his own ulterior motives. Miller revels in the sensual display of sex, food, and magic, whipping up a storm of effects that finally get out of hand in an overblown ending. It's a handsome film with strong performances all around, but the mix of anarchic comedy and supernatural horror doesn't always gel and Miller seems to lose the plot in his zeal for cinematic excitement. The performances ultimately keep the film aloft: the hedonistic joy that Nicholson celebrates with every leering gaze and boorish vulgarity is almost enough to make bad form and chauvinism cool. --Sean Axmaker

Return to Oz Return to Oz
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $5.83
Used From: $6.25
Average Rating:

You don't fool with Mother Nature, spit into the wind, remake Casablanca, or trash the land of Oz. Perhaps that is why the 1985 live-action sequel split critics and audiences alike. The 1939 classic musical is so beloved that it's almost impossible to imagine seeing Dorothy in shock therapy, a crumbled yellow brick road, the ruins of Emerald City, and the Tin Man turned into stone. But L. Frank Baum, the author of the original Oz books, portrayed just that with his continuing stories of Dorothy. When you get by these tough facts, the film version is solid entertainment for the over-7 set. Dorothy (a 10-year-old Fairuza Balk in her debut) is back in Kansas, where Aunt Em (Piper Laurie) is at the end of her rope: her niece is not sleeping and going on about a place called Oz. Therapy may be the answer, but luckily the scary clinic goes dark before Dorothy can be, er, cured (but the lead-up will scare the munchkins out of most kids). She wakes up in the land of Oz, now in tatters, and searches for its king, the Scarecrow. A new set of friends, including a tin soldier, a talking chicken, and a pumpkin man, help her against new villains, including Princess Mombi (Jean Marsh)--complete with a set of detachable heads--and the evil Nome King (Nicol Williamson with a great assist from Will Vinton's Claymation). The sole directorial effort of Oscar-winning editor Walter Murch is stuffed with marvelous effects that foreshadow later works by Tim Burton and the Henson non-Muppet films. --Doug Thomas

RETURN TO OZ

Elvira, Mistress of the Dark Elvira, Mistress of the Dark
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $4.07
Used From: $2.24
Average Rating:

Horror hostess Elvira inherits a mansion and causes a stir in a conservative New England town.


31 Horror Movies in 31 Days 2.0: WITCHCRAFT 9 (1997)

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Blogplay

Leave a Reply