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Reviewed by: davybozal24-7
Posted on April 30, 2006 6:26 PM
The script for this movie unfolds in Rashomon style , with different points of view recounting events . Based on a true story , the case of Michel is well known among those who study exorcisms . In 1976 ,
the Catholic Church officially recognised the demonic possession of a German college girl . The movie takes us to modern day America ,
and an average teenager called Emily Rose who is the target of terrifying demonic forces . The question is was she , as many believe , truly possessed ? During her exorcism , the young woman died and the priest stood trial for her murder as a result .
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A surprise hit when it was released in September 2005, The Exorcism of Emily Rosetells a riveting horror story while tackling substantial issues of religious and spiritual belief. It's based on the true story of Anneliese Michel, a German student who believed she was possessed by demons, and whose death during an attempted exorcism in 1976 led to the conviction of two priests on charges of negligent manslaughter.
As director and cowriter (with Paul Harris Boardman), filmmaker Scott Derrickson adapts this factual case into a riveting courtroom drama in which questions of faith, and the possibility of demonic possession, take the place of provable facts in the case of Father Moore (superbly played by Tom Wilkinson). A small-town Catholic priest, Moore has been put on trial for the post-exorcism death of Emily Rose (Jennifer Carpenter), a college student who, like her real-life inspiration, believed she was suffering from demonic possession. As an agnostic defense attorney (Laura Linney) argues the father's case against a Methodist prosecutor (Campbell Scott), flashbacks reveal the exorcism ritual and Emily's ultimately fatal ordeal, and Carpenter's performance is so frighteningly effective that it's almost painful to watch.
From here, the film remains deliberately ambiguous, leaving viewers to ponder their own belief (or lack of it) in the supernatural. It lacks the extreme shock value of The Exorcist, but by leaving room for doubt andbelief in a legal context, The Exorcism of Emily Rosegains depth and resonance in a way that guarantees similar long-term appeal. --Jeff Shannon
Aspect Ratio: | 2.40 Anamorphic Wide Screen |
Main Language: | English |
Region: | Region 2 |
Special Features: | Directors Commentary, Genesis Of The Story Featurette, Casting The Film Featurette, Visual Design Featurette |
Subtitles: | Dutch, English, Hindi, Italian |
Year: | 2005 |
Release Date: | March 20, 2006 |
Runtime: | 117 minutes |
Certification: | |
Catalogue Number: | C D R 39131 |
Keywords: | Rose, General, Mystery, Emily, Exorcism, Thriller, Whodunnit |
Genre: | Thriller |