

1957's Night of the Demon was all about an investigator who discovers one of these groups.Having anything to do with a reasonable, normal, evil bunch of black-clad homicidal night-meeters' goals? Noooot quite. Hilariously subverted in Hot Fuzz - black robes? Check.A lot of Hammer Films productions featured cloak-wearing demon worshippers of one stripe or another.Mike and the bots can't decide if they're pro wrestlers or if "Canadian rules football is quite different." The cultists in The Final Sacrifice are a bunch of machete-wielding madmen in black tanktops and hoods out to Take Over the World by summoning the spirits of an extinct Native American civilization.The viewer is meant to infer that these Keres-worshippers are hard-to-track and have been operating in secret for quite some time. Evidence of a cult's operation is presented piecemeal, via newspaper articles, letters, reference materials and a specific photo, gradually detailing a Greco-Roman Mystery Cult that is involved in a spate of disappearances. In The Facts in the Case of Mister Hollow, has an investigator researching "paganism" in northern Ontario in 1933.Exactly how sinister they really are is left somewhat unclear.


Demon Lover Demon Lover has the former leader of a devil-worshiping cult summons a creature from the depths of Hell to carry out his revenge against the coven's members.(it stands for "People Against Goodness And Normalcy"), a motorcycle gang-cum-satanic cult whose leader chants in really bad rhyme. The 1987 film parody version of Dragnet featured the P.A.G.A.N.S.Despite the presence of several LARGE HAMS (including William Shatner and Ernest Borgnine), it has all the thrilling scares of cardboard box convention. The Devils Rain was advertised as giving the audience "the first real look into the world of Satanism".The cult practices Human Sacrifice, but it is unclear what its actual goals are.

In Curse of the Crimson Altar centres a witchcraft cult established by Lavinia Morley, a woman executed for witchcraft in the 17th Century, which still operates in the present day.
