The Devil's Rejects is a 2005 horror film, directed by Rob Zombie. It is the sequel to the 2003 film, House of 1000 Corpses.
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A few months after the events in House of 1000 Corpses, Texas Sheriff John Quincy Wydell and a large posse of State Troopers start making a full-scale attack against the murderous Firefly family residence for over seventy murders and disappearances that they have caused over the previous several years. Tiny is MIA, Rufus is killed and Mother Firefly is taken into custody. But two of the family members (Otis B. Driftwood and Baby) escape.
The duo seek refuge at a run-down hotel, where they torture and murder Banjo and Sullivan, a traveling country band, before meeting up with Baby's father Captain Spaulding. In doing so, they evade a massive dragnet led by Sheriff John Quincey Wydell, whose brother was killed by Mother Firefly in the last movie. Wydell wants to avenge his brother's death, and the countless other victims of the Fireflys, but slowly loses his sanity continuing his chase against the killers.
The surviving Firefly clan gather at a whorehouse owned by Captain Spaulding's brother by adoption, Charlie Altamont, where he offers them shelter from the police.
Charlie is pressured by Wydell to give the Rejects up. With the help of two amoral bounty hunters called the Unholy Two, the sheriff takes the family back to the Firefly house where he proceeds to torture them in ways not unlike the ways they tortured their own victims; among them are nailing Otis's hands to his chair, and tormenting Baby over the death of her mother (whom Wydell killed earlier).
He lights the house on fire and leaves Otis and Spaulding to burn while taking Baby outside to murder her. Charlie Altamont returns to save his family, but is brutally axed by Wydell. It is only the last minute intervention of Tiny that saves the Firefly family; the giant returns and snaps Wydell's neck.
The Rejects are saved and share a brief tearful reunion. Tiny decides to go back into the burning house to die alone and Otis, Baby and Spaulding escape in Charlie's car.
The film's final scene has the trio driving into the middle of a police barricade, with no sound heard except Lynyrd Skynyrd's Freebird. As the tempo of the last portion of the song increases, they grab their guns and go forward in a final blaze of glory before being shot to death by the police.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Bill Moseley | Otis B. Driftwood |
| Sid Haig | Captain Spaulding |
| Sheri Moon Zombie | Baby Firefly |
| William Forsythe | Sheriff John Quincy Wydell |
| Ken Foree | Charlie Altamont |
| Matthew McGrory | Tiny Firefly |
| Leslie Easterbrook | Mother Firefly |
| Dave Sheridan | Officer Ray Dobson |
| E.G. Daily | Candy |
| Michael Berryman | Clevon |
| Danny Trejo | Rondo |
| Diamond Dallas Page | Billy Ray Snapper |
| Brian Posehn | Jimmy |
| Kate Norby | Wendy Banjo |
| Priscilla Barnes | Gloria Sullivan |
| Lew Temple | Adam Banjo |
| Geoffrey Lewis | Roy Sullivan |
Despite the film's gruesome violence, prominent critic Roger Ebert offered a positive review, giving the film three out of a possible four stars. He considered The Devil's Rejects an improvement over its predecessor, and wrote, "There is actually some good writing and acting going on here, if you can step back from the material enough to see it."*
In his review for the 2006 remake of The Hills Have Eyes, he once again made reference to Rejects. "I received some appalled feedback when I praised Rob Zombie's 'The Devil's Rejects', but I admired two things about it: (1) It desired to entertain and not merely to sicken, and (2) its depraved killers were individuals with personalities, histories and motives."*
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It uses material from the
"The Devil's Rejects".
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