

DEVIL HUNTER
Color, 1980, 102 mins. 13 secs.
Directed by Jess Franco
Starring Al Cliver,
Ursula Fellner, Robert Foster, Antonio de Cabo, Werner Pochath
CANNIBAL TERROR
Color, 1980, 93 mins. 42 secs.
Directed by Alain Deruelle
Starring Silvia Solar, Robert Foster, Burt Altman, Gerard Lemaire, Pamela Stanford, Olivier Mathot
88 Films (Blu-ray) (UK R0 HD), Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9)

Thanks to the massive international success of a string of Italian-shot cannibal gore films in the '70s and early '80s, it was only natural other countries would try to get in on the act. Some of the cheapest and goofiest imitations actually arrived the same year from France courtesy of Eurociné, a specialist in erotic or horror-themed titles with very, very low budgets. The company proved to be one of the havens for Jess Franco in the '70s, so they decided to recruit him for their most notorious cannibal offering, Devil Hunter, which was circulated in several edits including an English-language release as The Man Hunter. That film was brought to DVD in its most complete form to date by Severin in 2008 shortly after the company provided SD releases of the two other Eurociné 1980 gut-muncher titles, Cannibal Terror and Franco's Cannibals, with the former title joining Devil Hunter for an expanded Blu-ray edition in 2015.
bug-eyed, naked cannibal god. Along the way, several of Peter's cohorts meet violent fates, and Laura and the locals provide the obligatory amount of nudity every five minutes or so.
Though hardly as outrageous as its Italian counterparts (no animal violence or genital mayhem here), Devil Hunter somehow ran afoul of the BBFC in the UK during the Video Nasties panic, which of course made it far more famous than it would have been otherwise. Technically the film is more than a bit ramshackle while the pace is equally uneven with lengthy jungle explorations alternating with sudden bursts of insanity involving naked dancing or actors dribbling stage blood at the camera. As far as junk food cinema goes it's all very entertaining though and well worth watching late at night when your critical defenses have been lowered. 
cannibal cookout central. Said flesh eaters are obviously Caucasians wearing warpaint and bad hairstyles, even more ridiculous than the ones in Franco's Cannibals. Then there's that beloved Eurociné dubbing, which never comes even remotely close to matching any single language spoken by mankind. The dialogue is easily as hilarious as Zombie Lake, while anyone expecting the no-holds-barred experience of Cannibal Ferox will be either amused or utterly deflated by watching the "natives" rubbing and mushing lots of animal guts for what seems like minutes on end. The cast only features a small handful of familiar faces, such as Sylvia Solar (Eyeball) and Jess Franco regulars Olivier Mathot and the ubiquitous
Robert Foster (Sadomania), but surprisingly, Franco didn't direct this one apart from some stock footage yanked from Cannibals.
shooting digitally today.
the first run. Cannibal Terror features the same transfer and color timing, a tad brighter but otherwise looking pretty much identical shot by shot; however, it also significantly adds English subtitles (translated) for the French track, a welcome bonus. The English dub is also included, with both language options in LPCM mono. Devil Hunter is advertised as featuring new color timing, which is an understatement; whereas the prior DVD had a dull, faded appearance, this one is vibrant and colorful, coming off like a rather different film with its greens and reds now having a fair amount of intensity. The usual English track is included, also with optional English subtitles. Cannibal Terror's big new extra is That's Not the Amazon!: The Strange Story of the Eurociné Cannibal Film Cycle (47m15s), featuring Calum Waddel, John Martin, Antonio Mayans, Mikel Koven, and, uh, Allan Bryce chatting about the scrappy studio's peculiar, short-lived cashing in on the Italian cannibal craze with films like these and White Cannibal Queen, albeit in a cheaper and more animal-friendly way with Jess Franco standing more or less as the main auteur of the cycle. It has fun pointing out those little idiosyncrasies like wedding rings on the "cannibals" and graffiti etched in trees. That hysterical deleted scene is back again, too, along with the English trailer. The one extra for Devil Hunter is the new Franco-philes: Musings on Madrid's B-Movie Maverick (47m59s) with Martin, Mayans, Rachael Nisbet, Andy Black, Mike Hostench, Tony Timpone, Martin Unsworth, Julian Petley, Dyanne Thorne(!), and Howard Maurer explaining the appeal of Franco's cinema, from the frequently bastardized home video releases to his impeccable taste in music and the presence of his two most iconic leading ladies, Soledad Miranda and Lina Romay. Some of the occasional film clips look pretty rough (very windowboxed and occasionally featuring heavy interlacing), but the commentators are enthusiastic as they tackle the genre hopping that often made Franco difficult to pin down for those who casually wandered into his cinematic wonderlands.