'The Deaths of Ian Stone' (2007) – Dario Piana.
This compelling admixture of Groundhog Day and Hellraiser finds that the increasing unstable life, and frequent deaths of Hallmark handsome Mike Vogel is disturbingly due to the predatory nature of Harvesters, fearsome, fear-feasting demons. This novel attempt at a horror upgrade proves mostly successful, the attractive young cast, delirious plot, and Stan Winston's exemplary creature design prove engaging. The giddy first act is genuinely intriguing, the hugely beleaguered Stone's grimly existential plight hooked me from the very get-go, and I relished all the bloody, whizz-bang Harvester vs human interludes! As always, Michael Feast's acting contribution proved exemplary, sexy PVC-clad demons always rock, and Piana's darkly demon-seeded shocker's upbeat conclusion felt altogether righteous. Horror protagonists are frequently little better than silicon-pumped cannon-fodder, but the dire jeopardy of Stone's delightfully angelic paramour (Christina Cole) manifestly held my interest. I give The Deaths of Ian Stone additional kudos since it isn't a remake, doesn't rely solely on asinine jump-scares, and, thankfully, it has absolutely nothing to do with Eli Roth.