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Don't Deliver Us from Evil

Don't Deliver Us from Evil (1971)

October. 13,1971
|
6.7
| Drama Horror

Anne and Lore, neighbors and best friends, barely into their teens, board at a convent school where they have taken a vow to sin and to serve Satan. Anne keeps a secret diary, they read a salacious novel, they get a classmate in trouble, they spy on the nuns, they set aside their communion wafers; they make a pact of devotion.

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Reviews

Karry
1971/10/13

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Beystiman
1971/10/14

It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.

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FirstWitch
1971/10/15

A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.

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Zandra
1971/10/16

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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Scott LeBrun
1971/10/17

This jaw dropping drama from France and director Joel Seria is sleazy and exploitative enough to understand all too well why it would get banned for blasphemy. The girls in the leads were older than what they were playing, but that doesn't make some of their scenes any less uncomfortable. His basic story of innocence allowing itself to be corrupted has a great deal of impact, especially since that innocence never completely goes away; these two girls remain pretty naive about the things that they do, and ultimately panic when they think that all will be discovered. This is all shot in a pretty straightforward way, and it's acted in an awfully convincing manner.Anne (brunette Jeanne Goupil) and Lore (blonde Catherine Wagener) are two girls, barely into their teens, who meet in a Catholic school and become intrigued with reading material that has been deemed forbidden. They get it into their heads to renounce God and devote themselves to Satan. Determined that their friendship survive no matter what, they start indulging in all sorts of bad behaviour, teasing and tormenting various older men. They cross a line when their attempts to seduce a motorist (Bernard Dheran) end badly.The uninitiated may well come to believe that, based on the films' reputation, that sleaze is all it has to offer, but it's also a tragic and upsetting story of adolescent curiosity. Certainly it's disturbing to watch as these kids commit arson, engage in acts of animal cruelty, and flaunt their bodies in front of men. The music by Claude Germain & Dominique Ney is haunting, there is a very literate quality to some of the dialogue, and the film does have a beautiful look courtesy of the cinematographer, Marcel Combes. It's also clear that Seria is critical of the Catholic church and is commenting on the idle rich as well.Once you see that disturbing finale, it will be pretty hard to forget it.This may play to a fairly limited audience but they're sure to find it worth viewing.Eight out of 10.

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The_Void
1971/10/18

It's quite unbelievable that this film doesn't have a better reputation, as Joël Séria's Don't Deliver Us From Evil is an intricately worked little shocker that is sure to appeal to fans of European cinema. It's clear that the film was made in France, as the plotting, style and atmosphere of the movie is very French indeed, and this benefits the movie as it wallows in the imperfections of its lead characters; two sexy, yet underage convent school girls that decide to forsake God and take sides with The Devil. Both characters clearly have the urge to do evil already in them, but the way that director Joël Séria coaxes them into committing sinful acts is good because the characters are easy to care for; but their acts make them easy to detest; and as we all know - God hates the sin, not the sinner. The themes of straying from the moral acts that we've all been taught since birth shine through well, as the pair at the centre of the story are completely angelic, and on the face of it; look like butter wouldn't melt in their mouths. It can be said that the actual plotting isn't all that shocking; but everything in the film is made more so by the fact that it's stars are so young.The 'evil' that the young girls do involves reading forbidden material at first, and eventually moves on to teasing men, arson and murdering people's pets. Joël Séria doesn't shy away from featuring nudity in the film; and the pair of scenes that handle attempted rape don't leave much to the imagination. Don't Deliver Us From Evil benefits from a pair of great performances from young French actresses Jeanne Goupil and Catherine Wagener. Both give the film their all and give mature portrayals of their characters. The film is said to be a horror film; but it isn't really the case, as the focus is more on the drama and the corruption of youth than the satanic themes. The director doesn't allow the film to descend into comic book styling's, like some other films handling Satan do; and this benefits the film as it always seems serious and mature. Don't Deliver Us From Evil (great title, by the way!) is not as shocking now as it would have been upon it's release in 1970 - but still the film holds some weight in the shock stakes as many of the ideas that it portrays are still taboo to this day. Overall, this is a fascinating watch and one that should be seen by anyone who has a chance to see it!

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lazarillo
1971/10/19

This obscure French film, still unavailable in English, is a more fictionalized and much more exploitative version of the same real-life murder later covered in Peter Jackson's "Heavenly Creatures". The two girls in this movie, however, are decidedly less sympathetic than the heroines of the later movie and they commit not only murder, but every form of religious sacrilege, as well as some unforgivable cruelty to some birds belonging to a poor, retarded handyman. It is thus pretty hard to feel much sympathy toward them (even if I could understand most of what they were saying).The two girls are also decidedly younger than their juicy counterparts in "Heavenly Creatures" and the scenes of them prancing around in their underwear or one of the nymphets deliberately enticing a much older man and nearly being raped TWICE make for some decidedly uncomfortable viewing. To the movie's credit these scenes are obviously intended to shock and disturb much more than titillate (and anyone who finds themselves being turned on by them probably has a lot bigger problems than this movie). The ending is very memorable and truly shocking. I would kind of like to watch this movie with English or Spanish subtitles, but I'm not really sure I could sit through it again.

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dbdumonteil
1971/10/20

The title is borrowed from a Christian prayer "Pater Noster" (Our Father) ,the last line of which is put into the negative form.That speaks volumes about the anti-Christian atmosphere of the whole movie. Something like Luis Bunuel on electric shock treatment.Two girls ,students in a severe Catholic school,rebel and do very nasty things .Stunning ending when,after reciting a Beaudelaire poem ,the two girlies set fire to themselves.The movie was theatrically released in 1972,but never never broadcast on TV,so I had never the opportunity to see it again.Its subjects (lesbianism,murders,sacrileges)were too much for the time and I wonder if the movie has worn well.Joel Seria 's other movies were watchable ("Charlie et ses deux nénettes")but none of them was as outrageous as his first one.

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