Posted on 04/15/2023 9:26:04 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Sean Patrick Flanery and Jordan Belfi in Nefarious
I don’t do movie reviews because I don’t watch very many movies. I have a handful of movies that I dust off for semi-annual viewings (The Man Who Would Be King, Zulu, The Wind and the Lion, Master and Commander, Patton, We Were Soldiers Once, and Black Hawk Down among them), but movie-going is just not my thing. It seems like that when I do go out; my wife has chosen a movie, like, for instance, Father Stu and The Passion of the Christ.
When we do find a non-woke and non-morally objectionable movie, we try to support the people who made it. So when we heard that the team of Chuck Konzelman and Cary Solomon, who had written/directed a couple of movies we liked, God’s Not Dead and Unplanned, were bringing out another film, we decided we had to go on opening night to do our bit.
The film is called Nefarious and stars Sean Patrick Flanery in the dual role of Edward and the demon Nefarious, Jordan Belfi as Dr. James Martin, and Tom Ohmer as Warden Moss. Here’s where I am supposed to let you know something about the actors, but I’d be lying to you. I’d never heard of any of the three before yesterday.
We thought the trailer looked intriguing.
What was really intriguing was the interview Konzelman and Solomon gave the John-Henry Westen show, which has since been banned from YouTube for saying bad things about abortion and transgenderism. You can read and listen to it on LifeSiteNews. The interview starts at 7:29.
In this interview, the writers talk about the strange events that happened while filming the movie. On the first day, 15 cast/crew members were out with COVID, and one of the writers was hospitalized. This added $600K in costs for leasing the main set. The union went out on strike on Day 4 over issues that were drummed up. The priest working on the project suffered a burst appendix. The most bizarre happening was that over Christmas, Solomon decorated one-half of his house with secular imagery and one-half with religious imagery to satisfy his young son. An animal came down the chimney and destroyed the religious decorations, leaving the secular decorations untouched. A record-high wind ripped the roof off a building where post-production work was taking place.
None of it was as spectacular as Jim Caviezel getting struck by lightning while filming The Passion of the Christ, but it was close.
The plot is fairly straightforward. Edward is on death row in Oklahoma. On his execution day, questions about his mental competency arise, and the state has Dr. James Martin, a heavily credentialed psychiatrist, interview him. Martin has just a few hours to make his determination, and his findings will decide whether Edward lives or dies. To make things interesting, Martin is an atheist of a very modernist bent.
As he interviews Edward, he encounters the demon, a fallen angel, Nefarious. A duel proceeds in which Martin attempts to outwit a supernatural being (that never works out well), while Nefarious temps Martin with fame and fortune, but he needs Martin’s acquiescence to close the deal.
Here are my bullet points.
The larger theme of the movie is that evil is real, it is active in the world, and that unbridled freedom is necessary for it to happen. It reminds us that Satan needs our cooperation to function. It is going to hit Libertarians and some Democrats hard right where they live.
THE WIND & THE LION (1975)Marines marching through Tangier
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLFFNtpZfnE
Thanks for the review, and for mentioning the writers are Catholic!
For a while, i saw a lot of ads for Pureflix, but recently none. Thanks for reminding me about this channel, as I have been thinking of joining up and watching the movies.
Go watch some of the YouTube videos of Fr. Chad Ripperger, a Catholic Exorcist. Abrupt personality changes are common. That being said, Catholic exorcists are trained to consider psychiatric / chemical imbalances *first*.
You’d have to be pretty much out of public entertainment to not know who Edward Norton is, as he’s done pretty much everything.
Must be getting late =)
Rotten Tomatoes Audience score is a 97%...and critics score a 29%. That usually indicates that there is a wide gap between elites and normies.
To some of us Edward Norton is Ralph Kramden’s pal. Yes, I watch a lot more old stuff than new stuff.
We don’t need a catholic priest to cast out demons. All Christians are able to rebuke demons
That wasn’t my point; it was alleged sudden changes in personality were unrealistic.
I gave the suggestion to listen to someone with firsthand knowledge; and backstopped the inevitable counter-question “hows do you know they’re not just mentally ill, and the symptoms made up to play up to the exorcist” with the other point.
True, but I wouldn’t try it without a very strong faith, and ability to keep calm under pressure.
This Baptist went along with two other Baptists to see the movie. It was intense, but with no profanity (a raretity these days...not even 1 mof***er). Definitely not boring.
Your post reminded me of ‘Sorcerer’ 1977 with music by Tangerine Dream.
I’m looking forward to watching it again. Epic
Califf: Great Rasuli, we have lost everything. All is drifting on the wind, just as you said. We have lost everything. The Rasuli laughs. Rasuli: Califf, is there not one thing in your life that is worth losing everything for?
I keep that in mind as I go through my life.
The author’s curated movie list was oddly ostentatious. The remainder of the review was no less uninformative.
p
That’s who I first thought of too. Amazing he is still around and now in the movies! ;)
Thanks. I hadn’t heard a whisper about this one. I see it just opened on the 14th. I’m always looking to improve my early warning system. Where did you hear about this?
I see it’s at a scattering of local theaters so I will make a point of seeing it. I appreciate the tip.
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