around for so long (with The Exorcist still casting a long shadow) that you'd think any possible twists had
been exhausted, but 2024 proved to have quite a few surprises in store. With films like Immaculate, The First Omen, Late Night with the Devil, and The Devil's Bath, there turned out to be quite a bit of life left in the idea of tackling faith and religious doctrine in film, but none of them tackled it as directly as Heretic. Starting off like a tense variation on Sleuth with most of the running time devoted to three characters, it's a compelling film that rewards repeated viewings with plenty of enjoyable nuances to its performances and clever production design.
However, in the house they find nothing is as it seems as their seemingly welcoming host wants to engage in
an unusual form of discourse about the nature of religion posing a series of challenges for the two young women. And that's all you need to know.
done on the sound design, which has plenty of atmospheric activity and gradually builds in intensity as the location
changes from one room to the next. An audio commentary by writer-directors Scott Beck and Bryan Woods (Haunt) is a lot of fun as they give shout outs to the actors (including the film-literate East who turned out to be more familiar with movies like Sorcerer than they were), explain the genesis of the story as an incident when they were location scouting on an earlier project, and go through the interpolation of pop culture references they were afraid wouldn't make the cut like Monopoly and Radiohead's "Creep." Wisely, they also don't offer a definitive reading on what happens in the last ten minutes. The one video extra is a making-of featurette, "Seeing Is Believing" (15m19s), featuring production footage and interviews with the three leads, both filmmakers and producer Stacey Sher, which includes some fun soundbites like Grant's "Film nerds make very good directors."