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THE REAPING

2007 • US HMDB
April 4, 2007

Katherine Morrissey, a former Christian missionary, lost her faith after the tragic deaths of her family. Now she applies her expertise to debunking religious phenomena. When a series of biblical plagues overrun a small town, Katherine arrives to prove that a supernatural force is not behind the occurrences, but soon finds that science cannot explain what is happening. Instead, she must regain her faith to combat the evil that waits in a Louisiana swamp.

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Crew

Production: Bruce Berman (Executive Producer)Erik Olsen (Executive Producer)Steve Richards (Executive Producer)Susan Downey (Producer)Joel Silver (Producer)Herb Gains (Producer)Robert Zemeckis (Producer)
Screenplay: Brian Rousso (Story)Chad Hayes (Screenplay)Carey Hayes (Screenplay)
Music: John Frizzell (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Peter Levy (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli •
Katherine Winter is a former missionary who lost her faith after her husband and daughter were slaughtered by a religious fanatic; now Katherine teaches at the university and deals with "exposing" miracles and paranormal events. One day, Katherine is called to investigate some strange events happening in a small town in Louisiana, where it seems that the ten biblical plagues are being unleashed. It will be very complicated for the woman to find a scientific explanation for what is happening in that place! Originality is generally not the winning element for the horror genre, especially in an era of remakes like the one we are going through; yet the Dark Castle of Joel Silver and Robert Zemeckis, with this "Signs of Evil" ("The Reaping" in the original), manages to bring to life a sufficiently original and intrinsically fascinating story. The starting point is the eternal struggle between Good and Evil, this time with capital letters, since it refers to the Supreme Good and the Supreme Evil, riding a bit the line of horror films with a religious theme that in recent years has not managed to take hold adequately. A small source of inspiration could be found in a little-known fantasy-horror film from 1988, "The Seventh Prophecy," in which a young Demi Moore found herself fighting against the forces of Evil and the signs of an imminent Apocalypse; in "Signs of Evil," instead, the apocalyptic flavor is wisely set aside to focus on the more intimate dimension of the provincial village, one of those villages almost out of the world, where time seems to have stopped and religious fundamentalism rules. The atmosphere of bigotry, in this case, has not been particularly accentuated to leave a greater aura of mystery over the story and the characters involved, while it has been sought to accentuate to the maximum the inner conflict of the protagonist, a beautiful and always good Hilary Swank (Million Dollar Baby) forced to fight Evil despite her condition as a convinced atheist making it ideologically impossible to accept. Perhaps it is here that lies the biggest flaw of "Signs of Evil," that is, the desire to portray the character of the protagonist on a stereotype already seen and reviewed in practically all horror films with a religious theme, to the point that at this moment it can be considered (unfairly) this element a "constant of obligation" for this type of films. The main attraction of this film, namely the ten biblical plagues, is rendered in a very effective way and manages to show itself as a guiding thread for the entire story: between unsettling rivers of blood, a lethal invasion of locusts, horrible pustules, and massacres of firstborns, there is really everything that was described in the Old Testament, shown in all its macabre spectacularity (the attack of the swarm of locusts is visually very well rendered). The direction of Stephen Hopkins ("Nightmare 5 - The Myth," "Lost in Space") is sure and attentive to details (admirable the choice of accompanying the protagonists' travels with shots from above, as if it were a "divine look"), as is the screenplay by Carey and Chad Hayes (La Maschera di Cera), capable of treating the subject with credibility and never descending into the ridiculous, a very frequent danger when dealing with religious themes. Good cast, in which, in addition to the already mentioned Swank, appear David Morissey (Basic Instinct 2), in the role of the rationalist man of faith Doug, Idris Elba (28 Weeks Later), in the clothes of Swank's assistant, and the young Anna Sophia Robb (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) in the diabolical clothes of Loren McConnell. In one scene, curiously reflected on a wall, appears the effigy of Pazuzu, the demon that possesses Regan in the classic "The Exorcist". "Signs of Evil" is, therefore, a decidedly original film in the approach it decides to follow and that, although it falls into some obvious and known narrative choices, will not fail to satisfy those who are looking for a good horror film with a religious theme. Recommended.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (4)

The Movie Diorama

The Movie Diorama

4 /10

The Reaping harvests souls of the religiously devoted by subjecting them to this. “What hath God wrought?”. If ever there was a tagline that would instantly persuade audiences to leap up from their sofas, drive to the nearest cinema complex and purchase a couple of tickets, it’s this one. Sure, using a phrase from the Book of Numbers (as opposed to Exodus which is the primary plot device of the film...) certainly sets the religiously inclined tone, that eventually dissolves into the plagued river of blood but more on that later. It also indicates the unimaginative stupidity that ensues, leaving logic and science behind for a faith-based apocalyptic tale that is in need of some serious stoning. A professor in debunking miracles is invited to investigate a “river of blood” in the nearby town of Haven, but is quickly ensnared in an apocalyptic mystery.

Whilst not the worst horror film in the existence of cinema, with a tepid schlocky tone that somewhat juxtaposes the devoted Christian ideologies presented, yet is so inexplicably dumb that it will leave you questioning why such a film was created in the first place. Its initial introduction commenced with much promise. Science against religion. Simple logical explanations explaining what many describe as religious miracles. Yes, it’s relatively on the nose and misses the point of acquiring faith, yet remained an interesting direction for the first half that managed to conjure up various problematic conversations.

Hot off her Oscar win, swanky Swank muddles through this unusual mystery with much trepidation, choosing not to believe that the plagues of Egypt condemning Haven are in fact coincidental, offering scientific explanations. Algae bloom for the “blood river” that has the consistency of red-dyed water (sorry not sorry...). Infections terminating frogs, that is never explained how they fell from the sky, but whatever. Flies consuming the flesh of the frogs, and you get the idea. She remains unconvinced throughout these biblical mishaps, and provides an interesting angle.

Well, that is until about halfway through when she switches from being Bill Nye the Science Guy to Pope Francis of the Vatican. Suddenly she has faith, despite her tragic backstory clumsily spliced with the main plot, and holy reaping balls do events get crazy. CGI locust infestation, satanic cult crazes and a thunderstorm of fire that incinerates life in a matter of seconds. It went from a minor science experiment to absolute chaos, quicker than a snap of your fingers. The change of pace is so jarring and bewildering, that when the predictably obtuse third act arrives you’re stunned into silence. The tantalising debunking approach now plagued by, well, the plagues. The mystery is ham-fisted and makes no sense whatsoever. Constant flashbacks providing clues, more like clear answers mind you, were choppy and fragmented. It’s not scary in the slightest. Main characters are expended and forgotten about almost instantly, a shame considering Elba was decent as always. And what’s Rea’s purpose in this? No seriously. Except for providing basic exposition, he seemed pointless in this endeavour.

A very minuscule part of my soul wants to like this for being the barking mad mystery that it is. To an extent, it is watchable if you know to turn your brain off and devour all the spiel on religious provocations, despite the interesting first act. It has this surreal allure, making each watch tolerable. But then I think back to the last thirty minutes and I then really want to experience all ten plagues for myself. Incomprehensibly ludicrous. What hath God wrought you ask? This.

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Intriguing first act gives way to dull second act, but decent ending

Released in 2007, "The Reaping" is a about a former ordained missionary who's now a professor who debunks supposed miracles around the world (Hilary Swank). She and her assistant (Idris Elba) venture to a bayou town where, amazingly, the ten plagues of Exodus are manifesting (!). David Morrissey plays their host in the town while AnnaSophia Robb plays the 12 year-old focal point of the plagues. Are the plagues real or can they be scientifically explained? If they're real, who's the source, God or the devil?

This is a haunting mystery horror film rather than a monster/slasher movie, so if you're looking for the latter don't bother. That said, this is an extremely well-made production. The visuals of the various plagues are awesome, particularly the bayou turning to blood, the locusts and fire raining from the sky. Moreover, Swank looks super sharp in the manner of Raquel Welch (neither are my type, but who can deny their looks that kill?). Elba is a likable partner and Morrissey seems creepy from the get-go. As for AnnaSophia, it's clear even at 12 years of age that she was gonna morph into a curvy cutie.

Where the movie goes wrong are elements of the story/script. It starts out good and is intriguing for the first 45 minutes or so, but then the next 30 minutes seriously lag. When the plot twist is revealed in the last act it turned me off the first time I watched the film, but I was braced for it with my second viewing and was able to accept it. The ending, while cartoonish, is spectacular in the manner of the end of "Raiders of the Lost Ark." So this is a solid mystery/horror movie, but it could've been better if they worked out the kinks in the screenplay, like the draggy second act and unsavory plot twist.

The film runs 99 minutes and was shot in St. Francisville, Louisiana (the bayou town), Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Shreveport & New Orleans, Louisiana, as well as San Juan, Porta Rico (the opening sequence) and Austin Texas.

GRADE: B-

JPV852

JPV852

6 /10

Watchable enough supernatural horror (in the vein of The Omen I guess), there's not a whole lot that was memorable save maybe for the finale. Hilary Swank felt like she was mailing it in as I didn't have much emotion in spite of her character's tragic background while Idris Elba, as great of an as he is, didn't make much of a mark and felt wasted. Can't say I was once scared but in fairness, these type of horror movies rarely do much for me. 2.75/5

Dr_Nostromo

Dr_Nostromo

6 /10

59/100

A fallen ordain minister, who now debunks miracles, goes to a small, secluded hamlet in Louisiana called Haven where the river appears to have turned to blood. This was a pretty entertaining "science vs religion" story centering around a creepy little girl. Is she an angel? the devil? or something else? The plagues were effectively presented as well as how you'd expect people in that culture to react. Not particularly scary but well worth a watch with an ending that, although not great, did the job just fine. -- DrNostromo

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