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  1. Oct 23, 2018 · In the contemporary world, the notion of hell is used to scare people into becoming Christians, with an emphasis on personal sins rather than a failure to care for the poor or hungry. In the...

    • Meghan Henning
    • Dalton Norman
    • Senior Staff Writer
    • Bill And Ted's Bogus Journey (1991) Not all movies depicting hell necessarily have to be of a horror persuasion, and Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey managed to serve up a pretty chilling afterlife.
    • As Above So Below (2014) Dante's classic poem Inferno was one of the first pieces of literature to attempt to describe hell, and the found footage film As Above So Below aped its ideas from the ancient work.
    • Jigoku (1960) Mixing the classic Judeo-Christian Hell imagery with Japanese mythology, 1960's Jigoku presented a surprisingly vivid account of Satan's domain.
    • The Black Hole (1979) Disney is known for their squeaky clean family image, but their off-the-wall sci-fi film The Black Hole scared the wits out of countless unsuspecting kids.
  2. Jun 27, 2024 · More modern interpretations of hell don’t depict it as a place but rather a state of mind where suffering comes from eternal separation from God’s love. Whether you see hell as an actual place or a state of extreme mental distress, here are some of the best movies ever made about hell.

    • Chrissy Stockton
    • No Reason (2010) First is a film by gore FX wizard Olaf Ittenbach called “No Reason”. “No Reason” is a movie that at present you can order overseas but that has yet to find proper US distribution.
    • The Burning Moon (1992) Olaf Ittenbach has been long heralded as a master of extreme cinema. His library of works proves this statement over and over with all sorts of horrific practical effects-based scenarios that rest heavily on gore and violence.
    • L inferno (1911) 2 An ol classic by film standards, you may have come across snippets of images over the years used in illustration or documentaries that cover the subject of Hell.
    • Hellraiser II: Hellbound (1988) You would expect every Hellraiser film to depict hell in some form or the other, though it was Hellraiser II: Hellbound that really took us into the abyss to visit the lair of the cenobites and the dreaded underworld per way of the “Lament Configuration,”.
    • Hellbound: Hellraiser II. And speaking of puddles of blood…Clive Barker’s original Hellraiser is a classic, but its sequel does exactly what it should by actually going to Hell and doubling down on all of the delicious cenobite lore.
    • Event Horizon. Colloquially referred to as “Hellraiser in Space,” it’s a more than fair comparison point and it’s not hard to see how Paul W.S. Anderson was eventually given the keys to the Resident Evil cinematic franchise due to work like this.
    • The Beyond. Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond is the title getting the spotlight here, but really any of the films from the directors “Gates of Hell” trilogy (City of the Living Dead and House by the Cemetery being the other two) qualify quite nicely, aptly enough.
    • The Gate. Honestly, this selection just as easily could have been Polanski’s Johnny Depp vehicle, The Ninth Gate, but these films are about the same in quality, and you’re probably more familiar with Polanski’s entry.
  3. Oct 29, 2020 · The shifting of hell from a physical place to a state of psychological suffering, in the end, does not lessen the effect of hell but puts its horrors into the realm of the unimaginable and the unportrayable.

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  5. Apr 23, 2013 · For based upon his interpretation of various New Testament texts, Augustine insisted that hell is a literal lake of fire in which the damned will experience the horror of everlasting torment; they will experience, that is, the unbearable physical pain of literally being burned forever.

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