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Monday, March 25, 2024

MOVIE REVIEW: IMMACULATE

 






















An American nun embarks on a new journey when she joins a remote convent in the Italian countryside. However, her warm welcome quickly turns into a living nightmare when she discovers her new home harbours a sinister secret and unspeakable horrors.

Director: Michael Mohan

Cast: Sydney Sweeney, Álvaro Morte, Benedetta Porcaroli, Dora Romano, Giorgio Colangeli, Simona Tabasco

Release Date: March 22, 2024

Genre: Horror

Rated R for strong and bloody violent content, grisly images, nudity and some language.

Runtime: 1h 29m

Review:

Michael Mohan's Immaculate borrows bits and pieces from a variety of sources such as Suspiria and Rosemary's Baby to create something that's initially moody before turning into something that's as nutty as it is darkly funny.  Mohan's direction is confident, and self assured with his film carrying a specific look and feel which takes full advantage of the setting and iconography of a Catholic nunnery in the Italian country side.  He creates a disconcerting, isolated setting that could serve as its own character in the grand scheme of the film's story.  Against that backdrop, Sydney Sweeney's wide eyed, naïve Cecilia enters an alien environment with sinister machinations at play.  Sweeney does some heavy lifting here as she carry's the film from start to finish as we follow her character's twisted journey.  She gives you a tangible sense of her character's lack of control over what's happening to her as things get progressively more dire.  There's an understated, restraint to her performance until the film hits its blood soaked final act where she takes a more active control over her destiny.  There's an abundance of themes you can pick through varying from religious to gender issues making it a film ready made to be dissected with think pieces.  That being said, the script relies on both sides of the board.  It’s an issue that extends to Sweeney's Cecilia who is little more than a cobbled together persona tethered together by a traumatic childhood event.  Immaculate's cathartic, finale recalls the closing moments of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre with it's bloodied, primal release but you're left feeling that it would have been even more impactful if the film has more well rounded characters.     

B

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