There are few issues higher than a well-made horror film that is aware of precisely how foolish it ought to be, which is why The Pope’s Exorcist completely guidelines. Sure, the film the place Russell Crowe performs an Italian exorcist who stories on to the pope himself is a blast. A foolish film that’s Really Good (versus Paradoxically Enjoyable) is terribly laborious to seek out, so when Crowe’s character saves the day after which is informed that there are 199 different exorcisms for him to carry out to avoid wasting the world, I lit up. We should always all pray that every possession will get its personal movie.
At this level, a tease for sequels and a broader universe of world-threatening demons reeks of franchising and large IP. However for The Pope’s Exorcist, it feels extra like the sunshine world-building of the John Wick franchise, continuously increasing its borders and letting you realize that there’s extra on the market than our hero encountered this time round. And within the case of Crowe’s Father Gabriele Amorth, the issues he’ll encounter simply occur to be servants of Devil and denizens of hell despatched to battle God and make the world a barely extra evil place.
Father Amorth is the pinnacle exorcist of the Catholic Church, and he handles its most complex circumstances. The film goes out of its method to ensure we all know that Father Amorth is a rational and cautious man, most frequently recommending psychological care to the supposed possession victims he visits, moderately than really performing an exorcism or coping with any actual demons.
So when Amorth finds himself confronted with essentially the most highly effective demon he’s ever seen at a run-down former abbey in Spain, it comes as a large shock. Amorth’s shock, and the exorcism’s significance, solely grows when he stumbles upon a large satanic conspiracy that’s been hidden for a whole bunch of years and will threaten your entire world — an objectively superior plot twist that might make any film higher. Every of the film’s reveals seems like a pure — and suitably dopey — subsequent cease for the story, or just a little little bit of coloration for the world that the film doesn’t belabor the reason of.
However the intelligent world-building solely works as a result of director Julius Avery is giddy to indulge within the silliness. The exorcism style has gotten stale in the previous few years — take the final Conjuring movie, for instance — however The Pope’s Exorcist playfully pulls at plot threads from The Exorcist, the all-timer, and its sequels. This features a few good nods to the underrated Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist, in the concept that Father Amorth is exceedingly assured in his religion, moderately than trope of a person of the fabric questioning God that different sequence often use. Each in entrance of his friends on the Vatican, who query an exorcism gone fallacious, or in entrance of the literal king of hell, Father Amorth is totally satisfied that God will see him by, whether or not it’s by the religion of his conviction or exact information of the proper prayer for any demon-fighting scenario.
The large shock is that The Pope’s Exorcist is extraordinarily effectively made, with continuously inventive photographs and setups from Avery, who has beforehand turned B-movie materials into one thing exceptionally enjoyable. (See: 2018’s Overlord.) The scares are thrilling and creative, whereas Crowe hams up his Italian accent to full-on prosciutto. And by the point the demons actually arrive, they give the impression of being and sound nice — the latter due to the dependable, gravelly voice of The Inexperienced Knight’s Ralph Ineson.
The Pope’s Exorcist doesn’t match the bone-deep terror or filmmaking heights of the unique Exorcist, however units itself aside by constructing the entire film on an understanding that its complete premise is just a little foolish — and it’s by no means afraid to lean into that reality, like when Amorth reminds a jury of Vatican friends that if they’ve an issue with him they’ll take it up along with his boss (the pope). It’s effectively made and takes its scary moments critically, however approaches each scene as a possibility to let the viewers have enjoyable, both by scares or jokes. It matches completely alongside the figuring out, in-on-its-own-joke horror of films like M3GAN and Barbarian, which is a welcome change for the ailing and stuffy exorcism style. So deliver on the demons; Father Amorth has 199 exorcisms left to carry out, and I believe a sequel for every one is precisely what we deserve.
The Pope’s Exorcist is out now in theaters and destined to turn out to be the No. 1 film on Netflix in a number of months.