The appeal of a Barkerian monster is something next to impossible to explain, but as real and palpable as can be. This is my prime takeaway having for the first time fully completed the first three volumes of his iconic Books of Blood . It is safe to say that Pinhead is the first real, full-blown villain I rooted for in a movie. As I said above, the appeal is next to impossible to explain, considering I was a child under the age of ten when I first saw Hellraiser. In Bravo's 100 Scariest Moments list ( Hellraiser makes the 19th place ) Barker himself states that the character, even though he never does anything nice or decent in the complete series, still gets fan mail from women who want to bear his children. I wouldn't go as far as that, but I see a certain elegance, an honesty in the priest from hell. I am intrigued and as a consequence Pinhead has been a figure whose dark aesthetic and humor has left a mark on me. Hell supposedly is a place of unspeakable torment and pain, ...
reviewing freaky books and movies