The Devil Inside
The Devil Inside is
a 2012 American supernatural horror film directed
by William Brent Bell and written by Bell and Matthew Peterman. It is a documentary-style
film about a woman who becomes involved in a series of exorcisms during her quest to
determine what happened to her mother, a woman who murdered three people as a
result of being possessed by a demon. It was released
theatrically on January 6, 2012.
Here are some clips of the typical features and themes within The Devil Inside. Showing some elements of documentary style techniques to use and develop into our own film.
This scene works well in demonstrating documentary style elements, with the use of amateur-like camera use, mise en scene and diegetic sounds to create a very realistic effect. Similar to the ideas we have for our film.
Reviews
The Devil Inside is presented as assembled
found footage that follows twenty-something Isabella Rossi (Fernanda Andrade)
as she reunites with her mother, Maria Rossi (Suzan Crowley), and searches for
an exorcist that can free Maria of a long-running demon possession. Maria has
been locked away in a Catholic psychiatric ward, following an attempted exorcism
that resulted in the murder of three people 20 years prior.However, as
Isabella spends more time with Maria in the ward, strange occurrences begin to
escalate as a dormant evil finds a convenient batch of new visitors to
terrorize.
Some
moviegoers will no doubt be ready to compare The Devil Inside to the 2010 film
The Last Exorcism – since the film also
features unique locales, documentary-style filmmaking, body-contorting horror
sequences, and a weighty religious side-arc. In addition, The Devil Inside also
relies on a similarly grounded tone – with a lot of exposition to fill out the
story. Instead of the limited (horror in a box) scope and slow-burn pacing of
the Paranormal Activity series, The Devil Inside employs larger sequences that
feature characters rushing from room to room to uncover a mystery, or run for
their lives. While the marketing might lead moviegoers to believe that the
majority of the film takes place inside the Catholic psych ward, the film
actually covers a surprising amount of Italian locales, while the exorcists’
“scientific” approach to freeing people of demon possession offers some fresh
ideas – not to mention smart suspense cues.
The
exorcisms in the film deliver some intriguing moments, but while there are
definitely a number of jump scares throughout The Devil Inside, overall the
“scariest” points tend to be less “frightening” and rely on expectation and
tension more than in-your-face frights. The possibility of something terrible happening
fuels most of the film’s best sequences – though, looking back, some horror
fans may feel as though not a lot actually happens by the end of the various
proceedings.
For better
or for worse (depending on how much character drama a filmgoer wants in their
found footage films), The Devil Inside spends a lot of time developing the
primary characters – especially how the two main exorcists in the film feel
about the Catholic church. David (Evan Helmuth) is a “company man” who, despite
his frustrations with pastoral politics, believes in the church and identifies
strongly with Catholic doctrine. Ben (Simon Quarterman), on the other hand, is
the nephew of an accomplished exorcist – and feels that working outside of the
church is the only way to truly help victims afflicted by demon possession.
Along with the primary narrative arc involving Isabella, the movie spends a lot
of time developing these side stories – all for very little payoff. As events
unfold, The Devil Insidecompletely abandons character building and resolution
in favor of “shocking” set pieces. One Ben-centric story bit is especially
under served – even though it’s hinted at more than once. The result is an
uneven narrative experience that’s front-loaded with too much exposition and
ends without any real payoff for the mythos (or the characters). Similarly,
audience members will probably find the film’s conclusion extremely abrupt or
possibly outright infuriating – at least if they are hoping for an interesting
(or exciting) climactic resolution.
That said,
the most outright bizarre aspect of the film is the way that the “documentary”
is actually presented onscreen. A number of segments feature hand-held camera
work, via cameraman Michael (Ionut Grama), coupled with static security-like
footage. However, on more than one occasion following close-up hand-held camera
footage (i.e., Michael in the room filming), The Devil Insidecuts to one of the
static shots ( where Isabella and Rosa are the only ones in the room, for
example). While some moviegoers will no doubt consider this nitpicking, the
success of “found footage” films is in their ability to (for a brief moment)
attempt to trick the audience into believing that these things actually
happened. As a result, anyone who is invested in how the film is being
presented will likely be pulled out – due to the inconsistent strategies in
presenting the footage.
The Devil
Inside won’t break any new ground in the “found footage” horror genre, but it
does offer some intriguing ideas about exorcism, a pair of interesting
characters, and a number of tense (though not entirely frightening) moments.
Overall, fans of the genre are likely to enjoy elements of the film – though,
given the slow, exposition-heavy opening act and a TOTAL lack of any ending or closure, many
moviegoers will leave the theater feeling as though the experience wasn’t worth
the ticket money.
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