Monday, January 8, 2018

Libera Nos (Deliver Us) 2016

Deciding to start watching a documentary observing a present-day Sicilian exorcist at 12:47 in the am might not have been the best decision, I thought to myself, as the film Libera Nos (Deliver Us) begins.  

The movie opens with a scene in a church.  A person, back to the camera, kneeling in front of an altar, is approached surreptitiously by a robed priest; as soon as the priest puts a hand on that unknown individual’s head, there begins a fit of the most loud, uncontrolled, blood-curdling and inhuman screaming you have ever heard.

Libera Nos is an Italian-French co-production.  The film is directed by Frederica Di Giacomo, a filmmaker I have been previously unaware of, but intend to pay attention to now.  Libera Nos won the Horizons competition at the 73rd Venice Film Festival.  The exorcisms of Sicilian Franciscan Father Cataldo Migliazzo are depicted onscreen.

The best documentaries, in my opinion, are those that involve as little manipulation by the director as possible; they allow action to unfold onscreen with minimal interference.  They are bare-bones: this includes lack of narration, computer graphics, clever editing, etc.  As a result, viewers are forced to draw their own conclusions on what they have just seen in the purest way.

What you see is what you get Libera Nos: we, the audience, forget that we are watching a movie, such is the minimal intrusiveness of the documentary crew filming this picture.  We get an up-close and personal depiction of Father Cataldo, as well as those unfortunate individuals dealing with anxieties they, and others, classify as possession.

As a Catholic Christian, the topic of the ancient ritual of exorcism holds a certain fascination with me.  At the same time, I consider myself a rational person, interested in psychology and related scientific phenomena.  What I particularly take note of in this film regarding the intersection of faith and science, is the conscious decision of the filmmakers of Libera Nos to highlight the care those religious individuals involved in exorcisms take to rule out psychological causes of the disturbances of those individuals afflicted with possession.  Father Cataldo and other religious are shown multiple times asking victims and their families if the afflicted has ruled out psychological disturbance/is seeking psychological treatment.

An excellent overview of the movie, as well as an informative interview with the film’s director, can be found here at the website of The Hollywood Reporter:


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