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  • Agnes (2021) Exorcism movie has an existential crisis—and it’s glorious

Agnes (2021) Exorcism movie has an existential crisis—and it’s glorious

Posted on November 9, 2025 By admin No Comments on Agnes (2021) Exorcism movie has an existential crisis—and it’s glorious
Reviews

When Your Demon Movie Ducks Out of Its Own Genre

Agnes is the rare horror film that looks you in the eye, pretends it’s going to be The Exorcist, then halfway through says, “Actually, I’m more interested in the crater it leaves behind than the fireworks,” and just walks off into a quietly devastating character study.

If you go in expecting a nonstop possession freak-out, you’re going to be confused. If you go in ready for a weird, sad, darkly funny meditation on faith, trauma, and the terrifying limbo of figuring out who you are after your whole worldview has collapsed—then you’ve just checked into the right convent.

Directed by Mickey Reece, Agnes starts as a “Catholic horror” movie and then pulls the rug so hard it basically changes genres mid-film. And somehow, that’s its secret weapon.


The Setup: Demon? Maybe. Damage? Definitely.

We begin in a convent straight out of Religious Horror Central Casting:

  • Habit-clad nuns

  • A stern Mother Superior

  • Whispered prayers and repressed tension

Then Sister Agnes (Hayley McFarland) starts behaving… not great.

She:

  • Spews obscenities

  • Screams and taunts the other nuns

  • Has violent outbursts

  • Radiates that “either possessed or done with everyone’s nonsense” energy

The church sends help in the form of two priests:

  • Father Donaghue (Ben Hall) – a disillusioned older priest who looks tired in his soul and his joints.

  • Benjamin/“Hola” (Jake Horowitz) – a young neophyte, still clinging to some idealism and baby’s first faith crisis.

On paper, this is standard exorcism-movie protocol: jaded veteran, nervous rookie, spooky convent, possessed nun. You can almost hear the familiar music cue gearing up. And yet, from the beginning, there’s a sideways, slightly off-kilter tone—awkward pauses, oddly funny beats, characters who feel too human for a straight-up demon show.

You realize pretty quickly: the movie isn’t just asking “Is Agnes possessed?” It’s also asking, “Does it even matter, compared to what all these people are already carrying around?”


Hayley McFarland’s Agnes: The Face of Holy Meltdown

Hayley McFarland doesn’t get a ton of screen time as the title character, but she makes every moment count. Her version of “possession” is unnerving precisely because it feels like one part demon, one part total psychological break, and one part deeply wounded girl who has finally snapped in a place that refuses to acknowledge how broken she is.

It’s:

  • Not glossy

  • Not sexy

  • Not even particularly “cool”

It’s raw, mean, and deeply sad. When she shrieks blasphemies or lashes out at the other nuns, it hits less like “evil entity” and more like every suppressed pain in the room getting shoved out through one unlucky person’s throat.

And that’s sort of the point: Agnes is the crack in the wall that lets you see just how unstable everything behind it already was.


Molly Quinn’s Mary: The Movie’s Secret Main Character

The real surprise—and heart—of the movie is Mary (Molly Quinn), Agnes’s close friend in the convent. At first, she seems like a supporting player: concerned, gentle, trying to care for Agnes while the big religious adults do their “Latin and drama” routine.

Then the film does something wild:

It leaves the exorcism behind and follows Mary out of the convent.

Once the church has done its thing (messily, ambiguously, and not exactly heroically), Mary leaves, stripped of faith and community. And that’s where Agnes fully reveals what it really is: a story about what happens after the horror, after the miracles fail you, after the candles go out and you’re stuck with your life again.

We shift from:

  • Candlelit rituals

  • Screaming nuns

  • Priests wrestling with demons

To:

  • A cheap motel

  • A soul-crushing supermarket job

  • Awkward conversations in strip-mall bars

And surprisingly, this is where the film really sings.


Life After God: The True Horror Is Minimum Wage

Mary’s post-convent life is painfully mundane—and that’s exactly what makes it so effective. The movie leans hard into the dark comedy of watching someone who spent years wrapped in ritual and dogma suddenly trying to:

  • Clock in and out on time

  • Handle creepy customers

  • Endure small talk with coworkers

  • Navigate men who see her as vulnerable prey instead of a human being

There’s something brutally funny in watching Mary, ex-nun, quietly ring up groceries while trying not to collapse under the weight of… everything. The supernatural crisis is technically over, but the existential one has just started.

She drifts through:

  • An awkward maybe-relationship with a coworker

  • Conversations with people who don’t know how to talk about faith without mocking it

  • The temptation to numb herself, to check out, to pretend none of it ever happened

It’s exorcism horror by way of indie drama, and the mashup works better than it has any right to.


Faith, Failure, and People Doing Their Very Best (Badly)

What makes Agnes surprisingly affecting is how empathetic it is toward its damaged, flailing characters. Nobody here is a cartoon villain or a saint:

  • Father Donaghue isn’t some noble warrior of God. He’s worn out, compromised, and more than a little suspect, but still trying to do something that resembles good.

  • Hola isn’t a wide-eyed innocent; he’s just as confused as everyone else, trying to sort out whether this is holy work or spiritual theater.

  • Mother Superior and the sisters aren’t faceless pious drones; they’re women trying to navigate fear, doubt, and community expectations in a world that doesn’t leave them much room to be human.

Even the so-called “bad” choices—leaving the convent, giving in to desire, running away from responsibility—are treated with a kind of weary understanding. People break in different ways. Some break quietly and bag your groceries.

The horror elements—possession, bloodshed, screaming—almost feel like the symptom, not the disease. The real sickness is:

  • Isolation

  • Suppressed desire

  • Rigid systems that can’t handle real human mess

And yeah, also maybe a demon. But the demon feels less like the main course and more like a very loud garnish.


Humor So Dry It’s Basically Ash

Part of what keeps Agnes from becoming just a wallow in religious trauma is its very specific, very deadpan sense of humor.

It’s not joke-joke funny; it’s:

  • Awkward silences funny

  • Weird line deliveries funny

  • “I can’t believe he just said that in front of a possessed nun” funny

There are scenes where the absurdity of the situation—priests bickering, nuns reacting like regular people, the church bureaucracy trying to manage a literal supposed demon—tips over into this dry, almost Coen Brothers–adjacent tone.

Then, later, when Mary is out in the world, that same tone shifts into a more grounded, tragicomic mood. The banality of her new life is played with the same seriousness as the exorcism scenes, which is its own kind of joke:

“Remember all that apocalyptic religious horror? Yeah. Anyway, here’s the true abyss: fluorescent lighting and cost-of-living.”


Why It Works (If You Let It)

Agnes is absolutely not going to satisfy everyone. If you:

  • Want a straightforward possession shocker

  • Need your horror to be tightly plotted and lore-heavy

  • Hate genre-bending halfway through a movie

…you are going to be deeply annoyed when the film abruptly stops being the movie you thought you signed up for.

But if you’re open to something stranger and more internal, Agnes becomes kind of brilliant:

  • It uses possession horror as a launchpad, not a destination.

  • It’s more interested in the collateral damage than the exorcism itself.

  • It gives its traumatized ex-nun protagonist the time and space to not be okay, without easy answers or tidy sermons.

And underneath all the weird structure and tonal shifts, there’s a very sharp point:

The scariest thing isn’t that evil might exist.
It’s what you do when the systems you trusted to handle evil turn out to be just as broken as you are—and then don’t call you back the next day.


Final Blessing

Agnes is a strange, lopsided, quietly powerful little film that dares to treat horror as the starting line for character, not the finish. Hayley McFarland makes the title role haunting; Molly Quinn turns Mary into one of the more memorable “final girls” of recent years—not because she outsmarts a demon, but because she has to keep living afterward.

It’s messy. It’s tonally risky. It’s sometimes awkward. But it’s also thoughtful, darkly funny, and unexpectedly moving.

If you like your horror:

  • A little artsy

  • A lot talky

  • And interested in faith and failure as much as jump scares

…then Agnes is absolutely worth your prayer candle. Just don’t expect the demon to be the only thing that gets exorcised.


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