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From 'The Exorcist' to 'Heretic,' why holy horror can be a hit with moviegoers

Religion is well-suited for terrifying and entertaining thrill-seeking moviegoers

Holly Meyer
Saturday 16 November 2024 08:34 EST

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In the new horror movie, ā€œHeretic,ā€ Hugh Grant plays a diabolical religious skeptic who traps two scared missionaries in his house and tries to violently shake their faith.

What starts more as a religious studies lecture slowly morphs into a gory escape room for the two door-knocking members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, underscoring just how well-suited religion can be for terrifying and entertaining thrill-seeking moviegoers.

ā€œI think it is a fascinating religion-related horror as it raises questions about the institution of religion, the patriarchy of religion,ā€ said Stacey Abbott, a film professor at Northumbria University in Newcastle, England, whose research interests include horror, vampires and zombies.

ā€œBut it also questions the nature of faith and confronts the audience with a debate about choice, faith and free will.ā€

Horror has had a decades-long attraction to religion, Christianity especially in the U.S., with the 1970s ā€œThe Exorcistā€ and ā€œThe Omenā€ being prime examples. Beyond the jump scares, the supernatural elements of horror and its sublime nature pair easily with belief and spirituality ā€” and religionā€™s exploration of big existential questions, Abbott said. Horror is subversive. Real-life taboo topics and cultural anxieties are fair game.

ā€œIt is a rich canvas for social critique and it can also be a space to reassert traditional values,ā€ Abbott said in an email.

Death, demons and other tough topics religion and horror address

Religions and horror tackle similar questions about what it means to be human ā€” how people relate to one another and the world, said Brandon Grafius, a Biblical studies professor at Ecumenical Theological Seminary in Detroit and an expert on Christianity and horror.

ā€œSo much of religion is about how we grapple with the reality of death. ā€¦ Helping us make meaning even in the face of that reality,ā€ said Grafius. ā€œHorror really serves that same process, as a way to reflect on death.ā€

Not only does Christianity translate well for U.S. audiences, it has a lot of raw material for moviemakers to work with, he said.

ā€œChristianity emerged as a strongly dualistic religion, where forces are either good or evil,ā€ Grafius said. ā€œEven though the U.S. is moving away from being a nation dominated by Christianity, we still have that dualism deep in our bones.ā€

Among the more recent religion-themed horror films, ā€œThe Conjuringā€ franchise, including ā€œThe Nunā€ movies, show paranormal investigators battling demons, Abbott said, while ā€œThe First Omenā€ and ā€œImmaculateā€ offer critiques of patriarchal attempts to control womenā€™s bodies.

ā€œThese films seem to be a direct response to many of the debates that are happening in the U.S. these days," Abbott wrote in her email. ā€œThese different approaches to religion in horror illustrate the way in which the genre is engaging with a very live debate around religion or more specifically how religion is being used to assert control (which is what ā€˜Hereticā€™ is all about).ā€

Grant, who plays Mr. Reed in the new movie, told The Associated Press that he shared some of his ā€œHereticā€ characterā€™s skepticism, although not necessarily from a religious perspective:

ā€œThere is a part of me ā€” probably a not very attractive part of me ā€” that likes to smash peopleā€™s idols. Anyone I feel is being a bit too smug or too pretentious, I donā€™t like to see that. I like to just take them apart a little bit.ā€

Horror can be challenging. It acts as a dark mirror that can reveal things people donā€™t want to admit and fears they donā€™t want to face, said the Rev. Ryan Dun, a Jesuit priest and theology chair at Marquette University in Milwaukee.

If done well, both religion and horror are unsettling, he said.

ā€œReligion, when it unsettles, asks us am I living up to the person I have been called to be or am I complicit in systems of violence, oppression, injustice, going with the status quo,ā€ said Dun, who wrote the ā€œTheology of Horrorā€ and teaches a course on it as well. ā€œIn the horror movie, the monster threatens normality ā€” threatens to destroy our status quo.ā€

But they deviate from there. In horror, there is no way out, Dun said. He pointed out that defeating a movie's monster doesnā€™t prevent sequels, hence ā€œJaws 2,ā€ ā€œTerrifier 3,ā€ ā€œReturn of the Killer Tomatoesā€ and more.

In Christianity, it is Jesus and the Gospels threatening the status quo, but they offer hope and a way out, he said.

Ti West mixes religion into the narrative of his new movie, ā€œMaXXXine,ā€ a horror film about an adult film star trying to break into mainstream movies. West, who also wrote and directed ā€œThe Sacrament,ā€ a horror movie inspired by the Jonestown Massacre in 1978, said he doesnā€™t actively set out to tell stories with prominent religion narratives, but religion can be ripe for mining.

ā€œIt kind of depends on the story,ā€ West said, ā€œAnything with morality wrapped up into it, they kind of go hand in hand at times. And itā€™s like religion is such a major part of every culture everywhere that ā€¦ I feel like sometimes itā€™s such a major part of life that gets put aside in movies.ā€

When religion works in horror ā€” and when it doesn't

Beyond poor storytelling, the mixing of horror and religion can go wrong if the movie is meant to offend the believers of a particular faith, said Lisa Morton, an award-winning horror author whose written books on Halloween and paranormal history.

But it can really go right. Mortonā€™s all-time favorite movie is ā€œThe Exorcist,ā€ a holy horror icon and a peak example of the genre. ā€œThe Omenā€ followed it.

ā€œAll of the contemporary bloodlines kind of trace back through those two,ā€ said Morton. ā€œItā€™s interesting how they keep getting rebooted over and over.ā€

Abbott agrees religion should be portrayed respectfully, just as she expects accuracy and respect for science in movies, though not every detail needs to be perfect. ā€œBut some horror films, like exorcism movies, are built upon the fact that they are drawing upon real rituals and then taking them to a more extreme conclusion,ā€ she said.

Osgood Perkins, who wrote and directed ā€œLonglegs,ā€ a horror movie about an occultist serial killer, invented the religious material in his film, piecing together whatever felt right from his imagination and real life.

ā€œI just make it up,ā€ said Perkins. ā€œBut then you catch hold of something like the Bible verse and youā€™re like, ā€˜Wow, this is really rich.ā€™ Beasts coming out of the sea with heads and horns and crowns and things like that. I didnā€™t make that up.ā€

For Dun, an accurate portrayal of religious rituals and symbols ā€” without over doing it ā€” can add heft to a scene.

ā€œThe rituals of the churches have been stylized and lived out for centuries,ā€ Dun said. ā€œWhen movies are silly or are sloppy with it, the power of the gesture and the power of the symbols are lost.ā€

___

AP reporter Krysta Fauria contributed to this report.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APā€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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