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Home Culture

Faith treated seriously

byCNS
8 August 2014
Reading Time: 2 mins read
AA

Battling evil: Eric Bana and Joel McHale star in a scene from the movie Deliver Us From Evil. Photo: CNS/Andrew Schwartz, Sony Pictures

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DELIVER US FROM EVIL: Starring Eric Bana, Olivia Munn, Edgar Ramirez, Hoel McHale, Sean Harris. Directed by Scott Derickson. 118 minutes. Rated MA15+ (Strong horror themes and bloody violence)

By John Mulderig

AS exorcism movies go, Deliver Us From Evil is better than most.

Though sensational at times, director and co-writer Scott Derrickson’s screen version of Ralph Sarchie’s memoir Beware the Night (written with Lisa Collier Cool) does at least treat faith seriously.

That’s hardly a surprise, however, given the sober tenor of Derrickson’s earlier take on the subject, 2005’s The Exorcism of Emily Rose.

Even so, its dark subject matter and some intense – and bloody – interludes suggest a cautious approach toward Derrickson’s latest dance with the devil on the part of all but the most resilient screen patrons.

Battling evil: Eric Bana and Joel McHale star in a scene from the movie Deliver Us From Evil. Photo: CNS/Andrew Schwartz, Sony Pictures
Battling evil: Eric Bana and Joel McHale star in a scene from the movie Deliver Us From Evil. Photo: CNS/Andrew Schwartz, Sony Pictures

The film’s credibility and effectiveness derive in large part from the profile of its main character. A no-nonsense New York City police officer and lapsed Catholic, Sergeant Sarchie (Eric Bana) is the last person to attribute the depraved behaviour he encounters every day to supernatural causes.

So it’s all the more remarkable when Sarchie’s investigation of a series of peculiar crimes taking place on his beat in the South Bronx eventually leads him to suspect that more than ordinary evil is at work in them.

He’s helped to that conclusion by Fr Joe Mendoza (Edgar Ramirez), a priest whose ties to the Church are frayed, but whose spiritual outlook is orthodox enough.

Fr Mendoza’s freelancer status and chequered past, the latter described at some length in the dialogue, may not sit well with some Catholic movie-goers.

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Yet, as Derrickson’s script, written with Paul Harris Boardman, suggests, who better to battle Satan than someone with demons of his own that he’s managed to vanquish?

At any rate, Sarchie gradually comes to accept the fact that his main suspect, Iraq War veteran Mick Santino (Sean Harris), is indeed possessed. But not before the evil emanating from Santino has begun to affect Sarchie’s wife, Jen (Olivia Munn), and young daughter, Christina (Lulu Wilson).

Later, Santino’s shadow will fall over Sarchie’s sardonic partner Butler (Joel McHale) as well. Whatever his earlier shortcomings, Fr Mendoza certainly takes his priesthood seriously.

He insists, for instance, that to be properly armed for his forthcoming struggle with the forces of darkness, Sarchie must humble himself before God, preferably by going to Confession. That Sarchie, for all his initial scoffing, does so indicates that Deliver Us From Evil is not just out to evoke chills.

It’s also, in the strictest sense, a conversion story as well as an exploration of the reality of super-human malevolence.

In the face of such iniquity, the movie suggests, only an active and trusting faith will suffice. The film contains mature themes, occasional gory violence, about a dozen uses of profanity, frequent rough and crude language, and an obscene gesture.

John Mulderig is on the staff of Catholic News Service.

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