
Intensity: 🩸🩸🩸 out of 🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸
Directed by Matt Devino & David Yohe
The Daemon was a perfect vessel to be unleashed at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival. The debut feature from Devino and Yohe taps into all of the key tropes of Cosmic Horror: coping with inner demons, battling psychoses and grief, dreams from the underworld, and elder gods rising from the deep. Add in some wonderfully grotesque body horror and you get a banger of a movie. Plus: we get Azathoth. If you know, you know.
Some films land at the right place at the right time. Such is the case with The Dæmon, a well-crafted slice of cosmic horror that evokes all the mythos you can shake a stick at. Cosmic horror can be a trick to pull off well. Every year at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival in Portland (and Providence), filmmakers will try to convince hardened cosmic horror fans of some new profound insights. If the movie uses too much exposition, you get bogged down in hyper-intellectualism. On the other hand, with not enough exposition, cosmic horror can become supremely difficult to unwind.
These types of films lean on an almost academic intelligence. They can be heady portraits of things that are explicitly unknowable. When not carefully done, they become art-school thesis projects that only the creator can understand. Or, the opposite effort is made, and the film can be sloppy and incoherent, leaning on gross-out gags to keep the audience engaged. The Dæmon threads the needle deftly, and it all starts with well-drawn characters.
The Cast of The Daemon
- Tyler Q Rosen plays Tom, a man whose father has committed suicide, and left him a legacy of madness and doom. He has fled to the family vacation cabin to confront his fate.
- Sara Fletcher plays Kathy, Tom’s wife. Kathy has taken to the bottle to cope with Tom’s disappearance and fears that he’s trying to leave her.
- Adriana Isabel plays Jess, a survivor of child and drug abuse. Jess believes everyone can be rescued from their inner demons.
- Oscar Wilson plays Mark, Jess’ husband and a work-obsessed occasionally oblivious jerk. Mark is also Kathy’s brother, and they have a playful but snarky relationship.
- Mario Daggett plays Mani, one of Jess’ counseling patients who is fed up with her empathic therapy efforts.
- Nick Searcy plays Elliot, Tom’s estranged and highly disturbed father.
- David McClain Jr. plays Clint, Kathy’s secret lover.

A Short Summary of The Daemon
Elliot, alone in his cabin on the banks of Lake Michigan is writing a final message to his son. Visions of his arm rupturing provide ominous warnings of impending madness, but he finishes his message. He then wanders out and surrenders himself to the vastness of the lake. Tom receives the certificate of Elliot’s death along with the completed letter, suggesting that visions from Tom’s youth were true. Something in the lake was calling him from the deep, from the dark, and the same thing that claimed Tom’s mother was going to get Elliot too. Tom was right, and his father was proud that he got away.
Tom flees to the cabin by the lake, to try and find more answers, leaving Kathy behind without saying goodbye. Meanwhile, Jess struggles in her job as a counselor, where she strives but ultimately cannot connect with her parolee charge. Mark is insensitive or unable to identify with what Jess is going through. He offers whatever limited moral support he can, but it’s a fairly weak effort. When Kathy comes in a drunken panic to request Jess’s help to find and talk some sense into Tom, Jess jumps at the opportunity to help.
When Mark, Jess, and Kathy arrive at the cabin, Tom is in an emotioanlly detached state and doesn’t want any help. Tom angrily lashes out that he was avoiding everyone for a reason. It was a warning to stay away. Tom isn’t grieving, as he still harbors old grudges about his dad not believing that Tom saw his mother dragged out to the lake by a mysterious force. He has come back to the lake for answers and he doesn’t want the others around.
That night, they have a mostly enjoyable campfire, unaware that The Crawling Chaos is coming. Azathoth, the chaotic supreme leader of the Outer Gods of the Lovecraftian Mythos has entangled Tom’s family and is coming to engulf the four campers. An evening full of nightmares washes over the group. As dawn breaks, the unlucky campers face destruction by demons within their psyches and externally by cosmic terrors. No amount of psychoanalysis or plucky determination is going to stop the forces of evil coming up from the depths.

Evaluation of The Daemon
I have always been a champion of evaluating a movie by how much I care for the protagonists. The Dæmon superbly sets up four wonderfully flawed protagonists, who have both admirable and despicable traits. The first act fleshes out the characters well, providing distinct textured personalities. Tom is sympathetic because he has been suffering from these literal demons since he was a child, and he intended to deal with this on his own and didn’t want to put others at risk. Jess has a huge heart but gets stuck in her own therapy cookbook. Her efforts come out well-meaning, but shallow. Kathy may be a hot mess, but she’s a caring hot mess. Mark can be a douchebag, but he loves his wife and his sister.
Rooting interests all. All this character development allows for the third act of carnage to land like hammer blows. These aren’t cardboard cutout characters. They are identifiable people, sympathetic individuals. Horror fans will enjoy the gory spectacle too. This film mixes in some amazing gory special effects for its little indie budget. There are a couple of amazing visual gags that may want to make you physically gag. (Or laugh!) The film renders Azathoth spectacularly, both in the night sky and deep underwater. According to director David Yohe, the imposing undersea Azathoth was a puppet designed by Oscar-winning effects man Joel Harlow.
The story is tight. Despite the challenge of depicting chaos incarnate, the plot is always comprehensible. It is an efficient film, and it never lags. Lake Michigan makes for a grand location. The setting is brooding, foreboding, and at times spellbinding. The dark and ambiguous ending is a classic horror ending. It is both bleak and spectacular at the same time.
Conclusion:
For a first-time feature film, The Dæmon punches above its weight class. The writing, directing, and editing brim with confidence. The acting was on point, and the characters were colorful and the relationships were clear. I would have liked to have seen some more time at the cabin before the chaos hit. Some additional character interactions would have been a bit of extra frosting that could have added additional depth.
For Cosmic Horror fans, this will be a must-see. It deals with trauma, grief, addiction, and guilt. The psychological horror also turns visceral, in unexpected ways. I had a wonderful time talking about this film with David Yohe, and it’s too bad that Matt Devino was unable to make the trip out to Portland, as he is a dyed-in-the-wool Lovecraft junkie.
The MPAA does not rate this film. The language, and particularly the gore would make this inappropriate for younger children, but hardened teens should be OK with even the gory stuff. The heady material might go over many younger viewers. This film is still on its festival run, and it does not yet have a distributor for streaming yet.
PODCAST INTERVIEW OF DAVID MICHAEL YOHE:
For some delicious extra insight, here is Eric’s interview with one of the directors of The Dæmon, David Michael Yohe. He’s a funny guy, and he was so at ease in the festival. It was a joy to hang out with him throughout our time at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed
Review by Eric Li






