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  • The Priest (2021) — When God, Ghosts, and Guilt Share a Confession Booth

The Priest (2021) — When God, Ghosts, and Guilt Share a Confession Booth

Posted on November 10, 2025 By admin No Comments on The Priest (2021) — When God, Ghosts, and Guilt Share a Confession Booth
Reviews

The Gospel According to Mammootty

Every once in a while, Indian cinema gives us a priest who doesn’t just bless the sinners—he hunts them down with style, smarts, and a glare sharp enough to send Lucifer into early retirement. The Priest, Jofin T. Chacko’s supernatural horror mystery, gives us exactly that. Mammootty, looking like he drinks holy water spiked with caffeine and regret, plays Fr. Carmen Benedict—a man who doesn’t just believe in exorcism, he probably has it listed as his emergency contact.

It’s his world of candlelight, rosaries, and crimes committed in the name of both God and greed. Imagine if Sherlock Holmes traded opium for incense and decided to moonlight as a ghost therapist. That’s Fr. Benedict in a cassock.


A Sinister Family Affair

The story kicks off with a rich family called the Alatts, who seem cursed with the worst kind of recurring event—a family suicide sale. Everyone’s dead except Elizabeth Alatt, who doesn’t make it long enough to appreciate the pity. Enter Fr. Benedict, who starts sniffing around like a bloodhound for divine justice. He’s assisted by DYSP Shekhar, the type of cop who probably spends more time looking confused than solving crimes, but it’s okay—Mammootty’s priest is the kind of man who could solve the Zodiac case during a power cut.

When he meets Ameya, the quiet, haunted orphan, things start to get interesting. She’s the sort of child who could make even Chucky rethink his life choices. Creepy? Yes. But in the best possible way. She’s the ghostly heart of the film—wide-eyed, trembling, and packing enough supernatural energy to power an entire season of The X-Files.


The Holy Mystery Machine

Now, the first half of The Priest plays like a classy whodunit sprinkled with unholy shivers. There are brainwashed victims, shady doctors, and a trail of pills that might as well lead straight to Hell’s pharmacy. It’s a mix of Father Brown, The Prodigy, and that one friend who swears they can sense “negative energy” in your living room.

But then—because this is Malayalam cinema and subtlety is for atheists—the film goes full exorcist in the second half. Possession! Revenge! Ghosts with moral dilemmas! It’s like someone invited the devil to a therapy session and he brought family trauma as a plus-one.


When Spirits Have Mommy Issues

The real twist isn’t just who’s haunting whom—it’s why. Turns out little Ameya isn’t possessed by Elizabeth’s ghost after all, but by Susan, the dead sister of Jessy, the math teacher who’s just trying to grade papers without being haunted by her own guilt. The emotional core of the film hits hard here: love, regret, and the kind of sibling bond that survives even death (and possession).

It’s absurdly melodramatic—but gloriously so. Like any good Malayalam horror, The Priest doesn’t care if it makes total sense. It cares that you feel it, preferably while clutching a rosary and whispering “what the hell” between popcorn bites.


Mammootty: The Coolest Clergyman in Cinema

Mammootty plays Fr. Benedict like he’s part saint, part detective, and part rock star. There’s something deliciously smug about watching him stride through misty corridors, muttering Latin prayers like he’s casting spells in a gangster film. You don’t question his methods; you just thank God he’s on your side.

This is a man who could exorcise a demon with one raised eyebrow. When he confronts evil, he doesn’t flinch—he leans in, because clearly the devil’s overdue for confession.


The Women Who Steal the Spotlight

Manju Warrier’s cameo as Susan is pure intensity wrapped in tragedy. She floats through the film like a ghost that paid extra for emotional resonance. Even in death, she acts circles around the living, proving that sometimes the afterlife has better screen presence.

Nikhila Vimal, as Jessy, gives the film its beating human heart. Her guilt and affection make the supernatural feel personal. You could swap out the ghosts for bad memories and the film would still hit—just maybe with fewer crucifixes.

And then there’s Baby Monica as Ameya. Let’s be clear: if this kid ever knocked on your door and asked for water, you’d hand her the house and move to another continent. She’s both terrifying and heart-wrenching, which is an impressive résumé for someone who still probably needs help reaching the light switch.


Holy Smoke and Style

Rahul Raj’s score deserves its own blessing. It doesn’t just accompany the film—it exorcises your living room. The violins screech, the choir sighs, and the bass hums like something ancient waking up beneath your floorboards. Jofin T. Chacko, for a debutant, directs with confidence. The camera loves the mist, the shadows, and the faces that linger half-lit in guilt and incense.

Sure, the pacing stumbles in places—especially when the film tries to juggle detective work, divine intervention, and a family reunion from the afterlife—but it never loses its mood. It’s like a séance that accidentally turned into a sermon and somehow worked.


The Power of Camp Compels You

What makes The Priest a guilty pleasure is its total commitment to the absurd. It takes its horror seriously, but not tooseriously. There’s a wink beneath the cassock—a knowing humor that creeps in when you least expect it.

At one point, you half expect Fr. Benedict to pull out a silver-plated revolver and shout, “The Lord’s work, baby!” But he doesn’t need to. His calm, steely faith is its own kind of weapon. Even the demons seem a little intimidated, like they’re wondering if they should just repent and get it over with.


Faith, Fear, and Fantastic Nonsense

By the end, when all the ghosts have been laid to rest and the sinners have been exposed, The Priest leaves you with a strange mix of satisfaction and delirium. It’s a film that dares to merge theology with horror, morality with melodrama. It’s not perfect—but it’s bold, atmospheric, and unashamedly operatic.

It’s also deeply human beneath the fog and the Latin chants. The film isn’t just about possession—it’s about grief that refuses to die, about guilt that clings like incense smoke, and about forgiveness that feels as miraculous as resurrection.


Final Benediction

The Priest is what happens when Malayalam cinema takes a crucifix, a mystery novel, and a ghost story and throws them into the same holy blender. It’s stylish, moody, and surprisingly touching—a supernatural potboiler with heart and humor.

Yes, it occasionally preaches more than it scares, but when your leading man looks like he could outwit Satan and still make it to Sunday mass, who’s complaining?

If you want your horror with a side of faith, tragedy, and just a hint of dark comedy, step into Fr. Benedict’s confessional. Just be warned—he might solve your problems, but he’ll definitely leave you questioning your therapist’s credentials.

Rating: 8.5 out of 10.
A haunting hymn of guilt, ghosts, and God—with Mammootty delivering the sermon we didn’t know we needed.


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