The acclaimed horror film puts an interesting spin on the found footage genre.

By Patrick Cremona

Published: Thursday, 18 April 2024 at 12:53 PM


The found footage format has long been a staple of horror cinema, but one recent film to have put an interesting spin on the genre is Late Night with the Devil.

Originally released in UK cinemas in March, the film received acclaim from critics – despite reservations about the use of AI images during a few cutaway scenes – and is now making its way to streaming service Shudder.

It follows the broadcast of a Halloween special of a fictional 1970s American talk show, with David Dastmalchian starring as charismatic host Jack Delroy, who we learn has been suffering from declining viewing figures in the months leading up to the broadcast.

At the outset, we are told that Delroy had recently lost his wife to lung cancer, and that he was a regular attendee of a Californian camp for the rich and powerful called The Grove – which appears to have a few cult-like properties.

Anyway, in a desperate bid to revive his show’s popularity, he books a range of occult-related guests for the Halloween special – which perhaps unsurprisingly has some pretty drastic consequences.

It all leads up to a frightening conclusion that may leave a few viewers a little perplexed – if that’s you, read on to have the Late Night with the Devil ending explained.

*WARNING: SPOILERS FOR LATE NIGHT WITH THE DEVIL*

Late Night with the Devil ending explained: What happens to Delroy?

Things first start to take a turn when one of Delroy’s guests, a psychic named Christou, performs a routine in which he claims to put audience members in touch with the dead.

Although his initial attempts are unsuccessful and he comes across as something of a hack, he suddenly appears to be spectacularly affected – and genuinely shaken – by what seems to be a real premonition to do with a person named Minnie.

During the commercial break, Christou insists that he has to leave as he is feeling unwell, but the show’s producer insists that he stays as the show is already experiencing a ratings boost due to the bizarre premonition.

After the break, Delroy welcomes his next guest, a former magician named Carmichael the Conjurer, who has now devoted his life to debunking what he believes to be the pseudoscience of occultism.

He instantly begins to criticise Christou and  label him a charlatan, but Delroy sticks up for the psychic – claiming that the Minnie to whom he had referred was actually a pet name for his late wife Madeleine.

Then things get really weird. Suddenly, Christou begins to projectile vomit a mysterious black liquid and is rushed to hospital, and although Carmichael continues to claim this is all a hoax, it is clear that something very strange is going on.

This continues when Delroy brings out his next pair of guests: parapsychologist author June Ross-Mitchell and the subject of her new book, a girl named Lilly.

We are told that Lilly was the only person not to die during a mass suicide committed by a Satanic church that worshipped the demonic entity Abraxas, and that she has the ability to conjure him at will.

Carmichael is once again extremely sceptical, but June and Lilly agree to perform a conjuring to dissuaded his doubts. However, during the commercial break beforehand, Delroy is told something very disturbing: Christou has died en route to the hospital.

Obsessed with keeping the ratings up, Delroy ploughs on with the show anyway, despite advice to the contrary from his sidekick Gus, and the conjuring goes ahead.

While she is possessed, Lilly claims that June and Jack are having an affair, and also says something about having met Jack before “under the tall trees”.

Laura Gordon as June and Ingrid Torelli as Lilly in Late Night with the Devil, with Lilly sat in a chair as June leans over her
Laura Gordon as June and Ingrid Torelli as Lilly in Late Night with the Devil.
Shudder

The conjuring looks very convincing, but Carmichael is still extremely doubtful – and to prove it, carries out a hypnotism on his own, which involves grotesque worms exploding from Gus’s torso.

He then proves by rewinding the footage that the audience only thought they had seen this, and it had in fact been a hallucination, before he suggests that something similar had occurred during Lilly and June’s conjuring.

Only, when they rewind that footage, it appears exactly as it had during the conjuring. In fact, not only that, but Delroy also notices that an apparition of Madeline appeared directly behind him – which understandably causes him to panic.

As Delroy and Carmichael begin to argue – with the latter still believing the whole thing to be a hoax – Lilly suddenly becomes possessed again, far more violently this time. Her head splits open, and she telepathically kills Gus, June and Carmichael while Delroy desperately tries to exit.

But instead, he finds himself transported to a nightmare-like world, and is shown reliving moments from his past. It also becomes clear that the demon who possesses Lilly had previously encountered him at The Grove – where he had struck a deal with it to ensure the initial success of his chat show.

It was this deal which had resulted in his wife contracting cancer, making him responsible for his death.

Still in the nightmare world, Delroy is paid a visit by Madeleine’s spirit, who tells him to stab her so she can be put out of her pain and misery. Although initially hesitant, he agrees – only for the scene to suddenly shift back to the studio where we see that he has instead stabbed Lilly.

The film ends with Delroy surrounded by dead bodies, and the sounds of police sirens in the distance – suggesting that far from reviving his show, Delroy will be spending a long time behind bars.