Thursday, May 01, 2025

Holy Night: Demon Hunters, Starring Don Lee

He is an exorcist who relies on his bare fists. When the devil needs a good butt-kicking, who you gonna call? Don Lee (Ma Dong-seok), that’s who. Technically, Bow’s associate Sharon does all the spiritual casting out of demons, but he is the one who holds off the hordes of satanic mortal followers. Frighteningly, business is brisk in Lim Dae-hee’s Holy Night: Demon Hunters, which opens Friday in theaters.

Ominously, the mortal “Worshippers” have recently sacrificed quite a few innocents under the direction of the shadowy “Archbishop.” Clearly, they are preparing something big. Bow fears it involves the unseen Joseph (seriously guys?), his fellow orphan, who was also “blessed” with elevated mojo, but gave himself over to the evil one.

Determined to avenge the nuns and orphans Joseph murdered, Bow dedicated his life to demon-fighting, with the help of his associates, Sharon and Kim Gun, two intended sacrifices he rescued. Sharon has the ability to operate on higher spiritual planes, but each exorcism takes a painful toll on her, physically and emotionally.

Young Eun-soo is an especially difficult case. She does not lack for good medical care, since her guardian older sister Jung-won is a neuro-psychiatrist. However, being a sensitive orphan makes Eun-soo particularly vulnerable to possession. In fact, the demon has dug in so deeply, Bow’s team must return to the scene of the crime, the sisters’ new home, where something very sinister is going on.

It could very well be that Lim and Lee learned an important lesson from Schwarzenegger’s only horror movie,
End of Days. It is not a film that has a lot of haters, but by the same token, few really embraced it either. For his fans, it just doesn’t feel like a Schwarzenegger movie. In contrast, Holy Night is a Don Lee movie, through and through. We often see him hitting Worshippers so hard they literally fly through the air. He dishes out to the satanists like they are gangsters in his Beast Cop/Roundup franchise.

Admittedly, there are times his two-fisted approach to exorcism looks a little silly. Nevertheless, much of the demonic horror is quite unsettling. Regardless, watching Don Lee beat up bad guys is always jolly good fun, regardless of which wicked master they serve. In fact, Lim marries these two genres surprisingly smoothly. It all works, because everyone takes the concept of evil deadly seriously, while at the same time, Lee periodically pokes fun of his own image, in a vintage Schwarzenegger kind of way.

So, yes, there are ludicrous moments, but they are all part of the fun. It is just satisfying to Lee unleash his beast mode on the demons from Hell. Highly recommended,
Holy Night: Demon Hunters releases tomorrow (5/2) in theaters, including the AMC Arapaho Crossing in CO.