INTERVIEW: Director-producer Michal Kondrat, Marian expert Father Chris Alar and actress Maria Juzwin discuss new film about the Mother of God. Maria Juzwin as Mary in the new docudrama about the ...
"If they are born, they will bring about the end of days." Magnolia Pictures has revealed the official trailer for a religious horror thriller film titled Deliver Us, from filmmakers Cru Ennis & Lee ...
Father Alar shared that the teaching on the Immaculate Conception is so important because 'Mary’s living proof that we can be holy and immaculate.' Father Chris Alar, MIC, provincial superior of the ...
It doesn’t take a theologist to see that “Immaculate” director Michael Mohan probably grew up a devout Catholic. His new horror movie stars Sydney Sweeney as a flung-from-innocence novice nun who ...
Sweeney, who's also a producer on the film, plays Sister Cecilia, a nun who has left the U.S., ready for what God has planned for her at a convent in a remote area of Italy. Set to take her vows, ...
Blasphemous, sacrilegious, and ethically disturbing are just a few of the adjectives that can describe Michael Mohan’s Immaculate. Taking place in a rural convent in the hills of Italy, American nun ...
Immaculate turns the story of Immaculate Conception into the framework for a horror tale – one that mixes the horror sub-genres of religious horror and pregnancy horror into one (hopefully) fine brew.
The 'Anyone But You' and 'White Lotus' actress plays an American nun who moves to an Italian convent filled with sinister secrets. By Lovia Gyarkye Arts & Culture Critic When the police stop the young ...
To open the Boston Underground Film Festival, “Immaculate” had its East Coast premiere at the Brattle Theatre on March 20. An atmospheric horror film about an innocent American nun, Cecilia — played ...
Sydney Sweeney is back again. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Get ready to get into the habit of being freaked out, because the ...
There’s nothing quite as scary as religious horror. Even if you’re not religious yourself, it still somehow manages to always get under the skin. From The Exorcist to The Omen, to modern films like ...