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The Sacrament

  • 2013
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Gene Jones in The Sacrament (2013)
Trailer for The Sacrament
Play trailer2:13
4 Videos
99+ Photos
B-HorrorConspiracy ThrillerFolk HorrorFound Footage HorrorPsychological HorrorHorrorThriller

A news team trails a man as he travels into the world of Eden Parish to find his missing sister, where it becomes apparent that this paradise may not be as it seems.A news team trails a man as he travels into the world of Eden Parish to find his missing sister, where it becomes apparent that this paradise may not be as it seems.A news team trails a man as he travels into the world of Eden Parish to find his missing sister, where it becomes apparent that this paradise may not be as it seems.

  • Director
    • Ti West
  • Writer
    • Ti West
  • Stars
    • Joe Swanberg
    • AJ Bowen
    • Kentucker Audley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ti West
    • Writer
      • Ti West
    • Stars
      • Joe Swanberg
      • AJ Bowen
      • Kentucker Audley
    • 150User reviews
    • 213Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 12 nominations total

    Videos4

    The Sacrament
    Trailer 2:13
    The Sacrament
    The Sacrament
    Trailer 2:13
    The Sacrament
    The Sacrament
    Trailer 2:13
    The Sacrament
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:12
    Trailer #1
    Red Band Trailer
    Trailer 2:12
    Red Band Trailer

    Photos111

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    + 105
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    Top cast67

    Edit
    Joe Swanberg
    Joe Swanberg
    • Jake Williams
    AJ Bowen
    AJ Bowen
    • Sam Turner
    Kentucker Audley
    Kentucker Audley
    • Patrick
    Amy Seimetz
    Amy Seimetz
    • Caroline
    Gene Jones
    Gene Jones
    • Father
    Kate Forbes
    • Mindy
    Conphidance
    Conphidance
    • Guide #1
    Derek Roberts
    Derek Roberts
    • Guide #2
    Shirley Jones Byrd
    • Lorraine Davis
    Reginald Lashaun Clay
    Reginald Lashaun Clay
    • Robert
    • (as Lashaun Clay)
    Dale Neal
    • Andre
    Kate Lyn Sheil
    Kate Lyn Sheil
    • Sarah White
    Donna Biscoe
    Donna Biscoe
    • Wendy
    Tovin A. Pristell
    • Guard
    Christian Ojore Mayfield
    Christian Ojore Mayfield
    • Pilot
    • (as Christian O'Jore)
    Shawn Parsons
    Shawn Parsons
    • Carpenter
    Talia Dobbins
    • Savannah
    Madison Absher
    • Allison
    • Director
      • Ti West
    • Writer
      • Ti West
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews150

    6.122.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6lnvicta

    A predictable, creepy found-footage romp that is a cut above many.

    The Sacrament is a fairly straightforward movie. It's about a group of guys who are part of a documentary film group and one of the guys' sister moves into an isolated commune and the film crew wants to know the full scoop. You'll know exactly where this movie is going as it progresses, but that isn't necessarily a bad thing. It gives a chance for director Ti West to establish some character background and vague insights into the religious group while slowly turning the creep dial up until the movie's climax. The acting is good across the board, the standout being the Father (Gene Jones) who is suitably charismatic as the cult's ominous leader. For a found-footage movie it's shot well, but of course there are the typical issues that come with the turf - impossible angles, how the footage was even found - but these are things you'd know going in. The movie itself is a well executed, suspenseful slow burn.

    The biggest fault in The Sacrament is its predictability. Again, it's not a bad thing, we just know what's coming at every turn. Creepy cult, innocent people poking their noses in places they don't belong, an underlying dark scheme that slowly unravels to the protagonists. If that kind of stuff interests you and you're willing to forgive the tropes that come with the genre, The Sacrament is a worthwhile watch.
    5chaosbaron

    Seemed on the right track, but pattered out to uninteresting

    The film is among the found footage genre. It leads in with some decent photography, nice ambient soundtrack, and some pretty good acting. The suspense builds with a decent and slow momentum, but unfortunately doesn't lead to anything interesting or unique. The film had a really nice opportunity to go down a different path. It had all the qualities to do so and be good. Unfortunately it just decided to re hash an old story and try to deliver it as something new. I can give it five out of 10 for keeping me interested until the climax good photography and nice track, but the subsequent let down can't allow me to give it anything higher. If you are interested in something like this I would recommend a documentary on Jonestown. There are many good ones out there.
    7MrsTheFrog

    Don't Look Away

    I was born in 83, so anything I know of Jonestown has been gleaned from podcasts, documentaries, or anniversary television broadcasts. Even that is much more than some.

    And that's how it works, right? As much as we hate to admit it, as time moves on, everything (and I do mean *everything*) fades from memory. Go ahead and ask a 16 yr old nowadays who Jim Jones or David Koresh were - I bet they'll roll their eyes and assume you're talking about an 80s rock band lead. That fading and moving on of time is exactly why the remake/prequel/sequel/reboot industry is a thing of the Millennial age that never was before.

    In order for history (good, bad, or indifferent) to continue to be passed along, the stories have to be retold and reincarnated in ways that are more appealing to those who come after. So maybe The Sacrament doesn't come right out and say, "Hey, we remade Guyana," but I sincerely doubt any of the filmmakers involved thought that viewers of the right age were going to mistake the story for anything else. Another movie that tells a variation of Jonestown without acknowledging it is "The Veil" btw.

    As far as found footage films go, this one is high quality cinematography-wise. I thought the casting was actually fairly impressive, and despite knowing exactly where the story was headed, I did find the second half hard to watch; it did give me insight into Jonestown in a way that was truly shocking.

    Worth a watch. Won't blow your mind, or bring home an Oscar, but Ti West is always hit or miss with me (mostly miss) and this one wasn't too bad. If you would rather see Jonestown through a less modern, less horror-genre lens, then by all means, go watch the stuff made in the 80s.
    4nick94965

    Lacking in subtlety. but long on ambition

    This is basically a re-telling of the Jonestown Massacre, which, if anyone doesn't know, is a real event that happened in the late 1970's, when a megalomaniac by the name of Jim Jones brought several hundred members of a religious group called the People's Temple to a remote jungle location in Guyana.

    After a small cadre of politicians arrived by a small private plane to respond to several requests from disillusioned members of the congregation, there suddenly was a desperate stampede by a number of the group to leave the compound. Jim Jones then ordered the guards to shoot the members who were attempting to leave, and gave the entire crowd each a cup of kool-aid laced with cyanide in a mass suicide.

    The event was forgotten for many years, and has been dramatized in this film, which takes the original story and hams it up for the camera, by taking the stance of a "reality" show approach to the filming.

    Unfortunately, the experiment fails to generate the sense of reality that the filmmakers were attempting to capture, and the feeling is much more forced rather than coming from a real event. Although it was a reasonably noble attempt to make a notorious situation somehow believable, by it's very nature, it is doomed. It would have been much more believable if the film were just shot as a normal film would be, without the extra layer of a "found footage" project.

    Since the camera is always supposed to be running, there are moments in the film in which the actors have to look directly into the lens and explain that the camera is going to keep running "so that there is a record of whatever happens," which completely destroys any sense of the reality of the moment -- the idea of deliberately having a camera in someone's hand in each scene is so unbearably false that the viewer is immediately left wondering why on earth they even thought this technique would help to make the story seem "real." In fact, it does the exact opposite.

    The use of the hand-held 'shaky cam' in almost every scene is utterly unmotivated -- in what would be the climax of the movie, the camera is so ridiculously present that it almost seems like SNL decided to take the idea and turn it into one of Andy Samberg's sarcastic short films, because they have used such a heavy-handed approach to the material.

    In telling the story of Jonestown, nothing would have been needed other than to have just told the story as it unfolded without the addition of this added layer of "reality" -- and it would have been a much more superior film. This, sadly, destroys any chance of that happening.

    The story of the People's Temple deserves better treatment than this, and, given a more experienced filmmaker, would have had a much deeper impact. I regret that we have lost that opportunity now, having seen this approach fail.
    4PhoenixRising1980

    Starts promising, completely falls apart in second half

    What starts out as a promising look into a religious cult, quickly turns into a jumbled mess of incoherent storytelling, baffling motivations, and annoying camera work.

    The problem is none of the characters are well rounded or defined beyond the absolute basics (and they do incredibly stupid things throughout the film, especially in the second half). So when things start going bad, it's hard to care. The film seems to want to offer a deep, nuanced look into the world of cults, but West doesn't seem to be able to paint anyone with more than a primary colored brush. Everyone is a caricature ...especially "Father", who is little more than a mouthpiece for religious mumbo jumbo.

    The decision to make this found footage becomes the film's biggest flaw, as the extremely limited use of the camera gives every scene a flat incomplete feeling, totally stripping the film of any gravitas or meaning. Found footage has become a lazy, tired cliché in the horror genre and West is no where near talented enough to make it work. West is quickly becoming a hackneyed presence in the world of horror, and it's a mystery why people make such a big deal of him.

    And I am wondering where the hell the $4 Million budget went, since the cinematography is bare bones, we're only ever in a single location, and there are no explosions or huge actions scenes. I mean you could've made this for less than a million dollars and it would've been exactly the same movie.

    All in all a disappointing film.

    Related interests

    Bridget Hoffman in Evil Dead (1981)
    B-Horror
    Gene Hackman in Conversation secrète (1974)
    Conspiracy Thriller
    Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
    Folk Horror
    Manuela Velasco in [REC] (2007)
    Found Footage Horror
    Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out (2017)
    Psychological Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gene Jones nailed his big interview scene in a single seventeen minute take.
    • Quotes

      Father: We were doing something great down here. We were gonna change the world. This was only the beginning. Why couldn't you leave us alone? What harm were we doing down here?

    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of Guyana : La Secte de l'enfer (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Heartbeats
      Words and Music by Olof Dreijer (as Olof Bjorn Dreijer) & Karin Dreijer (as Karin Elizabeth Dreijer Andersson)

      © Universal - Polygram International Publishing Inc. On behalf of Bert's Songs Ltd. (ASCAP)

      Performed by The Knife

      Courtesy of Mute & Rabid Records

      By arrangement with Bank Robber Music

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    FAQ20

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 1, 2014 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ayin
    • Filming locations
      • Savannah, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Worldview Entertainment
      • Arcade Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,221
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $583
      • Jun 8, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,221
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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