Hellraiser Judgment 2018 Apr 2026
By [Author Name]
The practical effects are astonishing for the budget: a tongue split with gardening shears, eyes gouged by a mechanical confessional, and a finale involving a bathtub of acid and a power drill. It’s unrelenting, misanthropic, and utterly devoid of the eroticism that defined Barker’s original. This is punishment as a desk job. hellraiser judgment 2018
If you want elegant S&M poetry, watch the original. If you want to see a Cenobite with a ledger book force a priest to drink his own dissolved flesh while arguing about Exodus 20, Judgment is waiting for you. Just bring a shower. ★★☆☆☆ (but a high two stars for pure, unfiltered audacity) By [Author Name] The practical effects are astonishing
Then came 2018’s Hellraiser: Judgment . Directed by and starring Gary J. Tunnicliffe (a longtime franchise makeup and effects artist), the tenth (yes, tenth) entry arrived with zero fanfare, a microscopic budget, and a singular goal: to wash away the taste of its universally reviled predecessor, Revelations (2011). Did it succeed? That depends entirely on your tolerance for grime, religious psychosis, and a Pinhead who trades philosophical barbs for detective noir narration. If you want elegant S&M poetry, watch the original
The final twist—spoiler alert for a six-year-old film—reveals that the human serial killer was actually a “saint” compared to the detectives hunting him. The movie’s moral compass is inverted. In the end, Pinhead doesn’t punish the wicked; he punishes the judgmental .
Shot in 19 days in Oklahoma City for roughly $350,000, Judgment is a miracle of resourcefulness. Tunnicliffe wrote, produced, directed, and played the lead Cenobite (the Auditor). The result isn’t a good film in the traditional sense, but it is a personal one—a stark contrast to the assembly-line feel of its immediate predecessor. The elephant in the morgue: Doug Bradley, the original Pinhead, had permanently walked away after Hellraiser: Hellworld (2005). Revelations used a cheap impersonator. For Judgment , Tunnicliffe cast Paul T. Taylor—a veteran character actor with a gaunt frame and deep, resonant voice.
When the rights were set to lapse again in 2016, producer Michael Leahy approached Tunnicliffe. The mandate? Make another cheap, fast sequel. Tunnicliffe, a veteran of Hellraiser III , IV , and Bloodline , had a different idea: “If we have to do this, let’s at least make it weird and horrible in the way Barker intended.”