Les Diables

  • Grande-Bretagne The Devils (plus)
Bande-annonce

Résumés(1)

Au 17e siècle, une ville de France est assiégée par le Cardinal Richelieu et ses troupes. Parmi les habitants, l’un des plus fervents opposants du Cardinal n’est autre que le prêtre Urbain Grandier. Courageux et bel homme, il ne manque pas de faire de l’effet aux nonnes du couvent, et en particulier à la mère supérieure Jeanne des Anges. Victime de crises d’hystérie, celle-ci croit être possédée par le diable et Grandier. Le Cardinal y voit vite un moyen de faire tomber son dissident ecclésiastique… (LaCinetek)

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Critiques (2)

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I haven't seen such a visually sophisticated film in a long time. And so bizarre. Ken Russell was original in every way, his films were a genre unto themselves, probably closest to the label gothic horror, mixed with visual ideas as if from the work of Alejandro Jodorowsky. In the first half, the action is on the sidelines, with an obscure panopticon of horny nuns, the Mother Superior with a hunchback who dreams of the penis of the head priest (brilliantly played by Oliver Reed), who sexually pleasures his flock from all walks of life in the fantastic backdrop of the fictional French town of Loudon (the film must have been terribly expensive). The rest of the film, when the holy inquisition starts working, is a truly dark spectacle (in the manner of Witchhammer) and the scene of the devil exorcising the naked nuns will haunt my mind for a long time. At times it was too bizarre, even for me. Such a bold artistic vision wouldn't be possible today, I don't know any film studio that would risk financing something like that. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A historical drama (not unlike the Czech film Witchhammer, as others have said) with elements of horror and a distinctive style (at times it felt like Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain). It was a bit boring at first, but the moment the Holy Inquisition shows up, the fun is guaranteed. A truly miserable era. ()