The Devils

Synopsis: Cardinal Richelieu and his power-hungry entourage seek to take control of seventeenth-century France, but need to destroy Father Grandier - the priest who runs the fortified town that prevents them from exerting total control. So they seek to destroy him by setting him up as a warlock in control of a devil-possessed nunnery, the mother superior of which is sexually obsessed by him. A mad witch-hunter is brought in to gather evidence against the priest, ready for the big trial.
Director(s): Ken Russell
Production: Warner Bros.
  4 wins.
 
IMDB:
7.8
Rotten Tomatoes:
72%
R
Year:
1971
111 min
2,163 Views


1

His Majesty has triumphed again!

I did pale beside the radiance

of His Majesty.

I didn't know

she was interested in religion.

I wonder who

His Majesty will favour today?.

What divine benevolence.

- I haven't seen her at court before.

- What some people will do.

Really. Provincial b*tch.

Encore! Encore! Encore!

A most original conception,

Your Majesty,

the birth of Venus.

I pray that I may assist you

in the birth of a new France,

where Church and State are one.

Amen.

And may the Protestant be driven

from the land.

Come on, you Protestant bastards!

Come on, keep moving!

Put your back into it!

Move!

Move!

Get on! Come on, there! Move!

I won't tell you again.

Pull, you Protestant pigs! Pull!

Push it!

The religious wars

are over.

Catholic no longer fights

with Protestant.

We have survived.

And we owe our survival

to the wisdom and to the humanity

of one man,

Georges de Sainte Marthe,

Governor of Loudun.

For it was he

who prevailed upon all faiths alike

to keep the peace.

And thus saved our city

from self-destruction.

Other towns were less fortunate.

And now our friend has been killed

by the plague.

People of Loudun,

as often as you see our city walls

standing, still proud and erect,

no matter what your faith,

then surely you must feel a need

to build a temple in your hearts

in remembrance of he

who preserved them for you.

- Amen.

- Amen.

- Oh, hurry up, it's my turn now!

- It's not! I haven't seen anything yet.

If they don't hurry, he'll be gone!

Is he as handsome as they say?.

Oh, I can't see...

Yes! I can see the procession.

It's coming up the steps!

But I can't see

whether he's handsome yet.

Yes! I can see him!

He's the most beautiful man

in the world!

Sister Agnes! Sister Agnes!

Sister Agnes!

Sister Agnes! Sister Agnes!

Why have you left your devotions?.

They were watching Father Grandier.

We wanted to see the funeral procession

of Monsieur Sainte Marthe,

Reverend Mother.

Satan is ever-ready to seduce us

with sensual delights.

Your prayers for Sainte Marthe

will be the more zealous

for not seeing his funeral.

That is the strength

of the enclosed order.

Yes, I know, Reverend Mother,

but it was a solemn Requiem

and the Cardinal would have given us

a dispensation to attend.

The powers of your uncle the Cardinal

are not in dispute, Sister Agnes.

You are not satisfied

with the contemplative life.

You should have joined the Poor Clares,

nursed the victims of the plague,

scrubbed out their vermin-ridden hovels.

- But Mother, I love our order.

- Then you shall combine the two,

scrub out the convent from top to bottom

on your knees

and pray for the soul

of the dead man at the same time.

Every Tuesday afternoon, an hour in bed

with the lace-maker's widow,

then off to take confession.

I mean, the hypocrisy of it.

It's no worse than

his penitents, the pretty ones, anyway.

They do it right there,

in the sacristy, almost in front of

the blessed sacrament.

Grandier could have me

anywhere, even on the Holy Altar itself.

- Shh! That's sacrilege!

- Look, there he is!

Now, there's a man

well worth going to Hell for, eh?.

Don't look at me!

Don't look at me! Don't look at me!

I'm beautiful! I'm beautiful!

Take away my hump.

Take away my hump.

Take away my hump.

Christ, let me find a way to you.

Take me in your sacred arms.

Let the blood flow between us,

uniting us.

Grandier.

Grandier.

Translate as you go, line by line.

"Pleasure in lust is nasty

and short and sickness."

Weariness.

"And weariness follows on desire."

Go on.

Oh! I don't like it! I hate it.

Your father sends you here

for instruction in Latin.

And we must not deceive him.

"But in everlasting leisure like this,

"lie still and kiss time away.

"No weariness and no shame.

"Now, then, and shall be all pleasure.

"No end to it.

"But an eternal beginning."

Why are you crying?.

I'm pregnant.

And so it ends.

You must learn to bear your cross

with Christian fortitude, my child.

I'm frightened.

Yes, of course.

How can I own the child?.

I am very frightened!

And there was such bravery in love,

wasn't there, Phillipe?.

All through those summer nights,

how unafraid we were each time

we huddled down together.

Remember?.

We laughed as we roused the animal.

- And now, it's devoured us.

- Help me.

And we were to have been

each other's salvation.

- Did I really believe it possible?.

- I love you.

Yes, I did believe it.

I remember leaving you one day,

you'd been unusually adroit.

I was full of that indecent confidence

which comes after perfect coupling.

As I went, I thought...

Honestly, I thought,

the body can transcend its purpose.

It could become a thing of such purity

that it could be worshipped

to the limits of imagination.

Everything is allowed. All is right.

And such perfection lends

for an understanding of this

hideous state of existence.

But what is it now?. Hmm?.

An egg.

A thing of loneliness, weariness,

sickness.

Where is love?.

Where indeed?.

Go to your father.

Tell him the truth.

Let him find some good man.

They exist.

Help me.

How can I help you?.

Hold my hand.

Like touching the dead, isn't it?.

Goodbye, Phillipe.

Don't be too long.

- Up your end.

- He's leaking.

Don't you dare.

Bring out your dead!

They're all dead! They're all dying!

Father! Father, please come quickly.

The chemist and the surgeon,

it's no good, Mother is dying!

A delicate dusting of pollen,

nature's most fragrant balm,

eucalyptus pollen.

From the Greek kaluptos,

covered flower protected by a cap.

A trap for the heroic hornet.

Hymenopterous healer.

A poison to exorcise poison.

Kill or cure!

Yesterday, powdered mistletoe.

Black cherry water.

It's a recognised cure!

Nobody ever complains!

Leeches! Dried vipers!

Sarsaparilla and poppy heads,

and now what?.

Hornets?.

Mother, please!

And what fresh lunacy is this?.

- A crocodile?.

- Schoolgirls walking two by two.

Simian reptile,

corpuscular circulation, invaluable aid.

Not the crocodile!

Turn your face towards God, my daughter.

Be glad. Be glad.

You stand on the threshold

of everlasting life. I envy you.

Bring out your dead!

- Bring out your dead!

- Bring out your dead!

- Bring out your dead!

- Bring out your dead!

Let us pray for her together.

We commend to thee, O Lord,

the soul of thy servant, Madame...

De Brou.

De Brou.

De Brou.

And although to this world she is dead,

to thee may she still live.

And the sins she has committed

in this life through...

through human frailty

do thou in thy merciful goodness

forgive.

- Amen.

- Amen.

Where are you?.

Hiding among the corpses, are you?.

Come out, you coward!

The dead shall not save you now.

- Where is he?.

- Who?.

The priest!

That desecrator of virtue, Grandier.

No woman in the entire town is safe

from the lust of that man. Not one!

- Neither mother nor daughter.

- Living or dead.

Necrophilia interruptus.

Virga distracta. Whores.

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Ken Russell

Henry Kenneth Alfred Russell (3 July 1927 – 27 November 2011) was an English film director, known for his pioneering work in television and film and for his flamboyant and controversial style. His films in the main were liberal adaptations of existing texts, or biographies, notably of composers of the Romantic era. Russell began directing for the BBC, where he made creative adaptations of composers' lives which were unusual for the time. He also directed many feature films independently and for studios. He is best known for his Oscar-winning film Women in Love (1969), The Devils (1971), The Who's Tommy (1975), and the science fiction film Altered States (1980). Russell also directed several films based on the lives of classical music composers, such as Elgar, Delius, Tchaikovsky, Mahler, and Liszt.Film critic Mark Kermode, speaking in 2006, and attempting to sum up the director's achievement, called Russell, "somebody who proved that British cinema didn't have to be about kitchen-sink realism—it could be every bit as flamboyant as Fellini. Later in his life he turned to making low-budget experimental films such as Lion's Mouth and Revenge of the Elephant Man, and they are as edgy and 'out there' as ever".Critics have accused him of being obsessed with sexuality and the Catholic Church. more…

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