What a great way to kill off the enemy! I really dug this movie, mainly because the main actor is so weird looking and mysterious, you can't help but feel very attracted to him, even though he runs into some really bad luck. Best scene though - the quicksand! Looked like very watery cement with some soap suds. I thought the ant torture was hard to take because they were really pouring gross stuff all over that girl's head as she was buried in the dirt. That's where he draws the line, and he storms out of the house. She manipulates him way too much and almost gets him in trouble for having weed. The relationship between Bobby and his step sister is really interesting.
The movie has a gang rape scene with all guys (victim and gang) in a car and it's quite disturbing. I don't know why, but you end up really loving this guy. I loved his angry looks at the camera, and I really loved the shots of him smiling devilishly at the end. His make out scene with Sherry had some major French kissing going on. It's always hot girls, but never hot guys. It's about time that I see some hot boy bods in horror movies. I liked how Bobby runs around in whitey tighties the whole time. Sherry has strange teeth and a evil glare that reminds me of a girl I knew in kindergarten. His step sister looks like a cartoon character. He's a red haired skinny kid who looks like he should be in a 70's stoner band. I loved the weird looking people who star in this, especially the main guy Bobby. In either case, I thoroughly enjoyed this movie because it was so unlike anything I've ever seen. I can't decide if this movie is really homophobic or if it's just toying with the idea innocently. Those fine freaky folks at Something Weird Video offer this hardcore ferocious piece of deviant Southern-fried sleaze on an ideal DVD double bill with William Girdler's laughably lousy debut feature "Asylum of Satan." The final image in this film is very scary and disturbing, concluding things on a shockingly nihilistic note that the Devil himself would approve of. The stark, no-frills style of the picture, best epitomized by John "Mak" Makinen's plain, grainy photography and Ray Fletcher's odd, spare, droning score, adds an immediacy to the warped proceedings that's both skin-crawlingly creepy and strangely compelling in comparable measure. Writer/director Joe Wiezycki relates the deranged story in a tight, snappy, straightforward manner that ensures that there's never any dreary lulls to speak of. "Satan's Children" is a sensationally sick, twisted and depraved doozy of a low-budget 70's drive-in horror flick. So Bobby escapes from the cult's dangerous clutches (killing four guards in the process) and exacts a harsh revenge on his stepfather, step sister and the foul gay goons who brutally raped him in order to prove he's got the right tough stuff to qualify as a soldier in Lucifer's army. Ray II) thinks Bobby is too much of a weak, passive wimp to cut it as a worthy member of the cult. Attractive lady cult member Sherry (the luscious Kathleen Archer) gets the hots for Bobby, but cult leader Simon (superbly essayed with mucho suavely slimy aplomb by Robert C. Luckily for Bobby he's saved by a nearby Satanic cult.
The evil homosexuals leave Bobby clad solely in his underwear on the side of the road. Fed up with all this abuse, Bobby runs away from home and winds up being savagely sodomized by a gang of greasy gay guys. He's relentlessly browbeaten by his overbearing stepfather (a marvelously hateful Eldon Macham) and equally nasty shamelessly flirtatious tease of an older step sister (a perfectly bitchy Joyce Molloy). Unhappy and discontent suburban teen Bobby (expertly played to the obnoxious hilt by Stephen White) lives in abject misery in the Florida suburbs.