Filmmaker Mark Bessenger and Thrillsville Productions have announced Satan is Not Dead. In reference to the title of the popular religious film franchise, God’s Not Dead, the upcoming horror flick will play not play for laughs but will be as filmmaker Bessenger says, “deadly serious.”

Satan is Not Dead poster

Synopsis: The film tells the story of Albie and his wife, Tam, who have returned to his small hometown where he has been hired to teach science at the local high school. Among the other trappings of small town America, Albie is disgruntled to discover that he is being pressured to include creationism in his assignments.  He invites his childhood friend Martin, now a priest, to dinner one night, and as the men argue science vs. faith, Tam finds herself confused about which side has the most merits.  Suddenly, a small ten-year-old boy shows up, covered in blood, on their doorstep.  He’s in shock, and for good reason—a cult of religious fanatics performed a ritual that would destroy Satan, but because the boy escaped before the end of the ceremony, it didn’t work.  To kill the Devil, the remaining cult members must murder the child.  A night of terror ensues as Albie, Tam, and Father Martin must fight to keep the cultists out of the house.  But while Albie has no doubts that the child’s life must be protected, Father Martin begins to wonder…what if they’re right?  What if the chance really exists to kill Satan?  Can one unconscionable act justify the end of all evil?  The battles, both external and internal, rage while a larger outside force watches for the outcome of the conflict in order to initiate its own cold-blooded agenda.

“The debate of science vs. faith, facts vs. belief, has been going on for hundreds of years,” Bessenger says of the project.  “I want to make a movie that explores the darker issues of both sides.  What do we believe, and how far will we go in the belief that we’re right?”

Congrats to Mark Bessenger and Thrillsville Productions

 

 


About the poster: The poster for Satan is Not Dead was designed by Bessenger’s friend and fellow filmmaker JT Seaton, who directed such works as George’s Intervention, In Darkest Slumber, and the award-winning short The Peripheral.

About the Author

Norman Gidney is a nearly lifelong horror fan. Beginning his love for the scare at the age of 5 by watching John Carpenter's Halloween, he set out on a quest to share his passion for all things spooky with the rest of the world.