The Exorcism of Emily Rose
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The Exorcism of Emily Rose | |
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Promotional poster for The Exorcism of Emily Rose |
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Directed by | Scott Derrickson |
Produced by | Paul Harris Boardman |
Written by | Scott Derrickson Paul Harris Boardman |
Starring | Laura Linney Tom Wilkinson Jennifer Carpenter Campbell Scott Shohreh Aghdashloo JR Bourne Joshua Close Henry Czerny Aaron Douglas Colm Feore Lorena Gale Mary Beth Hurt |
Music by | Christopher Young |
Cinematography | Tom Stern |
Editing by | Jeff Betancourt |
Distributed by | Sony (through Screen Gems) |
Release date(s) | September 9 2005 |
Running time | 119 min |
Language | English Assyrian Neo-Aramaic German Greek Hebrew Latin Aramaic |
Budget | $19 million |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Exorcism of Emily Rose is a 2005 horror/thriller film directed by Scott Derrickson. The film is based on the true story of Anneliese Michel, a young Catholic woman from Germany who died in 1976 after unsuccessful attempts to cure her from the alleged state of demonic possession with the means of psychotropic drugs. Also, church-approved exorcism was performed on her, according to her wish. According to the court, her death was caused by medical neglect at the wishes of the priest watching over her. The story of her short life, strong faith and exhausting struggle with what seemed to be supernatural powers served as the basis for this horror movie. The screenplay was written by Scott Derrickson and Paul Harris Boardman.
Many viewers saw the film as a courtroom drama that was marketed as a horror film, and it was largely dismissed by critics who were expecting a more terrifying experience. As of July 18, 2006 it had made $144,166,820 worldwide according to www.boxofficemojo.com.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
In an extremely rare decision, the Catholic Church officially recognized the demonic possession of the 19 year-old college freshman. Told in flashbacks, The Exorcism of Emily Rose chronicles the haunting trial of the priest accused of negligence resulting in the death of the young girl who is believed to be possessed and the lawyer who takes on the task of defending him.
Lawyer Erin Bruner (Laura Linney) takes on the church and the state when she fights for the life of a priest, Father Richard Moore (Tom Wilkinson) who performed a deadly exorcism on a young woman, Emily Rose (Jennifer Carpenter). Linney must battle the state lawyer as well as her own loneliness, as she realizes that her career so far has not fulfilled her. She takes the case, albeit reluctantly, because she believes it will elevate her to senior partner at her law firm. The priest agrees to let her defend him only if he is allowed to completely tell Emily's story.
The trial begins with the calling of several medical experts by the prosecutor, Ethan Thomas (Campbell Scott) who testify that Emily was suffering from both epilepsy and psychosis. The defense contests she may have actually been possessed. Several flashbacks show how this began. Alone in her dorm room one night, at 3:00 AM, she smells a strange burning smell, hears noises, and sees a jar filled with pens and pencils move by itself. Additionally, her covers roll themselves down, and a great weight seems to press down on her, a force which also proceeds to lift her shirt up and seems to possess her momentarily. Through these episodes she wonders if they are really happening or if it is it just a hallucination she is experiencing. She suffers more "visions", is hospitalized and diagnosed with epilepsy. She is given anti-seizure medications which she claims do not work. Her visions continue, as do her severe bodily contortions.
She leaves school and returns to live with her parents. She and her parents become convinced she is not epileptic or mentally ill but is possessed by demons. They ask for their local parish priest to be called in to perform an exorcism, and the Church agrees. The prosecution counters that all this could be explained by a combination of epilepsy (the contortions) and psychosis (the visions).
Meanwhile, Erin begins to experience strange occurrences at 3:00 AM, including strange smells and sounds. Father Moore warns her that she herself may be targeted by demons. Later in the film Father Moore explains that 3:00 AM is the witching hour, which evil spirits use to mock the Holy Trinity. Significantly, it is the opposite of 3:00 PM, the hour at which Jesus died.
Seeing that the prosecution is putting up a seemingly solid medical case, Erin decides to try to show that Emily may have actually been possessed. She calls in an anthropologist, Dr. Sidur Adani, to testify about various cultures' beliefs about spiritual possession.
A psychiatrist present during the exorcism comes forward to reveal an audio tape made during the rite. The priest is then called to the stand to testify. The tape is played and the movie then flashes back to the exorcism. It is performed on Halloween because Father Moore believes it might be easier to draw out the demons on that night. The priest, Emily's boyfriend, and her father are in the room. Emily is tied to the bed. The priest uses holy water and various words from the Bible. She speaks in tongues, including Latin, German, Hebrew, and Aramaic. Several cats run into the room, jumping on the priest and knocking him down. Emily breaks her ties and jumps out the window, running into the barn. They follow her. Inside the barn, they are subjected to more supernatural phenomena such as unnatural gusts of wind and demonic screams and voices. The demon inside Emily refuses to name itself after repeated demands from the presiding Father but finally reveals contemptuously that there are not one but six demons. They go on to identify themselves in dramatic fashion, naming themselves one after another in dual voices from Emily. They identify themselves as the demons that possessed Cain, Nero, and Judas Iscariot. Beyond that three demons name themselves directly as Belial, Legion and "Lucifer, the devil...in the flesh."
The audience flashes back to the court room. The priest says that after this Emily refused another exorcism but also refused to take her anti-psychotic medication. She died a few weeks later. The prosecutor contends that her speaking in tongues can be explained by her having gone through the Catholic Catechism, in which she could have learned the ancient languages, and that she had studied German in high school. The priest admits that it might be possible that she did indeed learn them there (although she uses them in some detail, not merely in rote recitation of religious formulae).
Erin then wants to call the psychiatrist but he does not show. She walks outside and sees him on the street. He says he can no longer testify, but he does believe in demons. Before he can explain he is hit by a car and killed. Later that night Erin's boss tells her she has ruined the whole trial and that if she recalls the priest to the stand she will be fired.
Nevertheless, she calls the priest back to the stand the next day. He reads a letter that Emily wrote him before she died. In the letter Emily describes another vision she had, the morning after the exorcism. She walks out of the house and sees the Virgin Mary, who tells her that although the demons will not leave her, she can leave her body and end her suffering. However, the apparition goes on to say, if she returns to her body she will help to prove to the world that God and the Devil are real. She chooses to return. She concludes the letter by saying "People say that God is dead, but how can they think that if I show them the Devil?" She then receives stigmata, which the priest believes is a sign of God's love for her, but the prosecution counters that she could have received the stigmata wounds from a barbed wire fence on her property.
Erin is offered a partnership at her firm for saving Father Moore from extended jail time, but she refuses and in fact quits. She goes with Father Moore to Emily's grave, where he has put a quote (which she recited to him the day before she died) from the second chapter of Philippians on her grave: "work out your salvation with fear and trembling".
[edit] Cast
- Jennifer Carpenter as Emily Rose
- Laura Linney as Erin Bruner
- Tom Wilkinson as Father Richard Moore
- Campbell Scott as Ethan Thomas
- Duncan Fraser as Dr. Cartwright
- Shohreh Aghdashloo as Dr. Sidur Adani (anthropologist)
- Ken Welsh as Dr. Mueller
- JR Bourne as Ray
- Joshua Close as Jason
- Henry Czerny as Dr. Briggs
- Aaron Douglas as District Attorney
- Colm Feore as Karl Gunderson
- Lorena Gale as Jury Forewoman
- Taylor Hill as Sister #3
- Chelah Horsdal as Asst. DA
- Mary Beth Hurt as Judge Brewster
- Katie Keating as Alice
- Darrin Maharaj as On-scene reporter
- Marilyn Norry as Maria Rose
- Iris Graham as Sister #2
[edit] Trivia
- The character of Emily Rose (a fictitious name) is based on the true story of Anneliese Michel, a young German Christian woman who died in 1976 after unsuccessful attempts to cure her from the alleged state of demonic possession with the means of psychotropic drugs. The court accepted the version according to which she was epileptic, refusing to accept the idea of supernatural involvement in this case. Two priests involved in the exorcism on her, as well as her parents, were found guilty of manslaughter resulting from negligence and received sentences, generating controversy. The girl's grave is still a place of pilgrimage for many Christians.
- German director Hans-Christian Schmid is launching his own treatment of Anneliese Michel's story, Requiem, around the same time in late 2005. His movie stays very close (perhaps closer) to the real-world events and is a drama rather than a horror film.
- According to the director, this may be the first ever courtroom horror film.
- The movie earned the MPAA rating of PG-13 for "thematic material including frightening sequences and disturbing images".
- The courtroom scenes and the university scenes were shot at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
- It was put on Bravo's 30 even scarrier movie moments, at number 15.
[edit] External links
- The Exorcism of Anneliese Michel by Felicitas Goodman - the book describing the real story of the demon-possessed girl
- Disponible en langue française : "La vérité sur l'exorcisme d'Anneliese Michel" par Felicitas D. Goodman (le livre qui a servi de base à la réalisation du film). France 1994.
- The Exorcism of Emily Rose at the Internet Movie Database
- Emily Rose at Yahoo!-Movies
- Catholic Youth Ministry review
- "Exorcism of Emily Rose" movie review at The Horror Channel
- "DVD (unrated version) review at DreadCentral.com
- Q&A with screenwriters Scott Derickson and Paul Harris Boardman
- What really happened to Emily Rose? A look at the facts at Dread Central by Scott A. Johnson
Categories: 2005 films | Aramaic-language films | Drama films | English-language films | Films based on actual events | German-language films | Greek-language films | Hebrew-language films | Horror films | Latin-language films | Thriller films | Best Horror Film Saturn | Films shot in Vancouver | Screen Gems films