A Demon, Some Texans, and One Very Dead Cat
There’s bad horror, and then there’s Through the Fire—a film so shoddy, it got re-released nine years later under a fake Fulci sequel title (The Gates of Hell Part II: Dead Awakening) just to trick VHS renters into thinking they were about to see Italian splatter. Instead, they got Texan amateur hour with a demon named Moloch who looks less like an ancient evil and more like he should be taking your order at a haunted Dairy Queen.
The plot is what happens when someone mashes Rosemary’s Baby with an after-school special about stranger danger. Sandra (Tamara Hext, who delivers all her lines like she’s practicing for a Miss Texas pageant), enlists the help of local cop Nick (Tom Campitelli, whose acting range goes from “mildly confused” to “deeply confused”) to find her missing sister. Along the way, they uncover a half-baked Satanic cult, a magic amulet with Hebrew text that looks like it came from Spencer’s Gifts, and of course, a demon.
Oh, and somebody freezes a cat in a freezer. Because nothing screams horror like Meow Mix popsicles.
The Satanists: Hobby Lobby Rejects
The cultists in this film are the least intimidating Satanists ever put on screen. They look like they wandered in from a failed heavy metal cover band, complete with receding hairlines and beer guts. These are not dark lords of the underworld—they’re guys you’d avoid at a Chili’s because they keep trying to sell you Amway.
They spend half the movie whining about how summoning a demon maybe wasn’t the best idea, which, shocker, is the first sensible thing anyone says in this script. The other half is spent dying, reanimating, and stumbling around like zombies who’ve had too much Lone Star beer.
Sandra and Nick: The Bland Leading the Bland
At the center of this mess are Sandra and Nick, possibly the most charisma-free duo in horror history. Sandra spends most of the film asking questions with the intensity of a woman deciding between nonfat and whole milk. Nick, meanwhile, is supposed to be a cop, but he reacts to discovering Satanic rituals and reanimated corpses the way most of us react to a pothole: mildly irritated but resigned.
Their “chemistry” consists of awkward silences and the occasional shared look that says, Are we really still filming this?When Sandra finally suspects Nick might have been turned into a zombie, she forces him to recite the Lord’s Prayer. The suspense of this scene is undercut by Nick stumbling through it like a kid who didn’t study for Sunday school. Still, it’s one of the few moments where the movie unintentionally achieves comedy gold.
The Medallion of Destiny (a.k.a. “Please Don’t Laugh, It’s Important”)
Central to the plot is a medallion inscribed with Hebrew, explained by a local professor named P.J. who exists purely to deliver exposition before being killed. She tells us the medallion is meant for a “destroyer” chosen by God to fight evil. Which sounds epic—except the actual prop looks like it was bought for $5 at a flea market next to knockoff Ninja Turtles toys.
This amulet supposedly beams holy light through Nick and Sandra at one point, in a scene so poorly staged it looks like someone accidentally turned on the wrong lighting rig. Instead of divine awe, it feels like they’re about to film a soft rock music video.
Horror Highlights (or Low Points, Depending on Your Mood)
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Frozen Cat Scene: Sandra finds her pet in the freezer, and the film lingers just long enough to feel like the director thought this was shocking cinema. Instead, it’s just cruel and stupid, like someone lost a bet at a PETA fundraiser.
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Cult Shootout: Nick kills one cultist with a gun, proving that while evil might lurk in the shadows, it’s no match for a .38 revolver. The Devil works in mysterious ways, but apparently not against Texas law enforcement.
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Zombie Hotel Showdown: The finale takes place in an abandoned hotel, a location clearly chosen because the production could rent it for cheap. The zombies shuffle around like hungover extras, and Sandra somehow fends them off with grenades, bullets, and the sheer power of not caring anymore.
Moloch: Fear the Rubber Mask
And then there’s the demon himself: Moloch. If you were expecting an awe-inspiring ancient evil, prepare for disappointment. This is no Lovecraftian nightmare—it’s a guy in a rubber suit with the mobility of a lawn chair. His big moments consist of glaring, waving his arms like a drunk uncle at karaoke, and reanimating cultists who already sucked when they were alive.
He’s the least scary Moloch in history. Honestly, the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode with the demon trapped in a computer had more menace.
The Cinematography: All Beige, All the Time
Shot in Fort Worth, Texas, the movie looks like a real estate brochure for foreclosed properties. Every scene is drenched in beige lighting, cheap furniture, and the kind of drab wallpaper you’d expect to find in your grandma’s guest bathroom. Even the “scary” scenes look like they were lit by a single desk lamp.
The Soundtrack: Satan by Casio Keyboard
Nothing ruins a horror film faster than the wrong soundtrack, and Through the Fire delivers in spades. The score sounds like it was composed on a $50 Casio keyboard by someone who only knew three chords. It’s supposed to be ominous, but it comes off as “mall Santa trying to play spooky.” Imagine watching a demon rip out a throat while the background music sounds like a rejected Price Is Right theme.
The Pacing: Eternal Damnation in Real Time
At 89 minutes, Through the Fire feels like it lasts longer than The Ten Commandments. The middle section is a slog of Sandra and Nick asking locals questions, staring at clues with all the intensity of someone reading a cereal box, and then driving to the next location. Every once in a while, a cultist pops up to keep the audience awake.
The Only Saving Grace: Accidental Comedy
To be fair, Through the Fire isn’t without entertainment value—just not the kind it wanted. Watching actors fumble through serious dialogue about Satan while surrounded by décor from a Holiday Inn is hysterical. Lines like “You are the destroyer!” sound less like divine prophecy and more like a coach trying to psych up his pee-wee football team.
The sheer incompetence of the effects, the acting, and the plot turns the film into a low-rent parody of itself. If you enjoy laughing at bad horror, this is prime material.
Final Judgment
Through the Fire wanted to be a chilling tale of demons, cults, and God’s chosen warrior. Instead, it’s a meandering mess with rubber monsters, bargain-bin Satanists, and more beige than Home Depot’s paint aisle. Even the Devil would be embarrassed to be associated with this nonsense.
But hey—it did give us the unforgettable “recite the Lord’s Prayer to prove you’re not a zombie” scene. That alone might make it worth watching… if only to confirm that yes, this movie really is that ridiculous.


