A priest is officiating at a convent, when suddenly he is transformed into the devil, who frightens away the nuns and turns the place into pandemonium.
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The Devil comes out of the ground at a convent and chases the nuns away. Once he has hold of the place, a whole host of demons join him and they begin to intimidate everyone. Of course, in true Dracula fashion, as soon as those crosses show, up the devils have had it. The costuming is fun. There is a lot of tricky maneuvering and staging since there are so many more characters.
This short film by Georges Méliès runs for approximately three minutes and thus slightly longer then the common length for films back around 1899. And it surely needs this duration as the film is packed with action from start to finish. Good attention from detail from Méliès and we basically see the theme of good vs. evil, a recurring theme often used by Méliès in his works, more frequently than by other filmmakers back then certainly. Hardly anybody dared to depict the devil, but Méliès did not only do that all the time, but also played him himself. Basically the devil uses the art of deception in order to slowly take over a convent and his followers, little boys dressed as evil, rise as well. We see a huge devil grimace in the background and it looked slightly similar to an evil version of the moon from Méliès most famous film. When several priests with crosses show up, the spook is over pretty quickly and Lucifer himself gets vanished by Erzengel Michael come to life in the end. Worth a watch for silent film enthusiasts mainly for the story, but also for all the smoke and special effects.
Devil in a Convent, The (1899) *** 1/2 (out of 4) aka Le Diable au couvent Very entertaining film from director Melies has the devil entertaining a convent where he disguises himself as a Priest to take advantage of some nuns. The special effects here are very good as the devil slowly removes all the religious stuff from the convent and turns it into his home full of devilish statues. This is a very interesting approach to a religious film as well as we see the devil take over but soon the religious people come together to try and fight him and send him back to Hell. There are a few brief laughs but for the most part the film takes itself pretty seriously. This is certainly one of the director's better films.
A priest is officiating at a convent, when suddenly he is transformed into the devil, who frightens away the nuns and turns the place into a outlet of Pandemonium. Another of Melies' wonderful combinations of stage and film magic, this tells a fine little story of the triumph of faith.But how did he get into the convent in the first place? This is one of the many previously lost or infrequently seen Melies pictures that have been made available by Serge Bromberg, David Shepherd and a myriad of other hands in the newly issued DVD set GEORGES MELIES: FIRST WIZARD OF CINEMA. Required viewing for anyone interested in the history of movies ..... and a lot of fun.