**This post contains spoilers**
There’s a beautiful woman sitting at the end of the bar. She’s charming, and her magnetic presence draws you in for more. Sounds like a perfect scenario for a night out on the town? No problems, right? Well, there’s a big problem, because she’s actually a succubus.
Temptress (Cynthia Bond) is a powerful demon, a monster with many supernatural powers. Her deadliest weapon? Lust. A married man named Norman (Rony Clanton)? A shameless womanizing bartender (John Canada Terrell)? Temptress knows how to pick her targets. Dangling the possibility of sex is more than enough bait to lure naive and unsuspecting men to their deaths, tempting forbidden fruit that’s rotten to the core.
You can also point to a big conundrum about Temptress’ character. Is she an antihero? Let’s face it, some of the men she targets aren’t exactly model citizens. The bartender clearly has no problem going after women, who are already in relationships. On top of that, he’s pushing for one of the women in his rotation to get an abortion.
Norman? Maybe he’s a guy, who’s played it too safe in life? He wants to step outside of his comfort zone, and have some fun, but he’s still a married men. Temptress leaving Norman with scars that’ll never heal, while also giving him AIDS? Of course, you could say that’s going too far for brutal punishment, but Norman would’ve been safe, if he never made the decision to cheat on his wife.
If you want to go on the more cruel side of Temptress’ rampage, it’s hard to imagine justifying Johnathan’s (Michael Rivera) unfortunate ending. Temptress baited Johnathan, a gay man, with the idea of sex being “much better” with a woman. Sure, maybe Johnathan is a bit full of himself, but that doesn’t mean he deserved to be mauled to death.
Temptress is seemingly unstoppable, until she runs into a young minister in training named Joel (James Bond III). He’s the last of a dying breed. The last man in his bloodline, who has what it takes to stop Temptress. The elaborate holy water plan involving Joel’s longtime best friend, K (Kadeem Hardison), Dougy (Bill Nunn), and the second bartender spectacularly failed.
The succubus was destroyed by a soft-spoken ordinary guy, a cross, and his faith. Pure evil was defeated by a genuinely earnest and good man, who was motivated by his loving grandmother (Minnie Gentry) and the memories of his dead father, Minister Garth (Samuel L. Jackson). In the end, Temptress’ obsession with conquering her only true obstacle was her undoing.
Temptress has the long golden nails, the snazzy all black outfits (with the exception of the “lady in red” scene), and there’s no denying Cynthia Bond brings a commanding presence to Temptress with a confident performance. Bond also shows some noticeable enthusiasm for the home stretch of the movie, during Temptress’ more cheesy and zany over the top scenes.
Temptress could’ve easily killed Joel and his grandmother. What happened? Temptress’ ego got in the way. It’s another classic case of an all powerful villain lowering their guard just enough to give the unlikely hero an opening for a miraculous comeback. Joel was able to put a stop to a lengthy and gruesome reign of terror, because Temptress couldn’t help herself, and she celebrated an incomplete victory too soon.
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