When God Builds a Church: Review of The Unholy (2021)

Ifeanacho MaryAnn
6 min readJun 24, 2021

Based on James Herbert’s 1983 novel, “The Shrine”, The Unholy (2021) starts like any generic 19th century-based horror movie: a resident possession, scared locals, a priest performing an exorcism in Latin, and a containment. Of course, just like your average horror movies, evil, unlike lightning, always strikes twice. So it comes as no surprise when disgraced journalist Gerry Fenn ( Jeffrey Dean Morgan), while investigating an incident of “cattle mutilation” in a small Massachusetts town called Banfield, unwittingly releases a 200-year-old evil. This is where the story deepens.

Later that night, deaf, 18-year-old Alice Pagett ( Cricket Brown) sees Mary/The Lady in a tree trunk so bizarre it makes Mother Willow look normal. After that visitation, Alice’s deafness becomes a thing of the past. Alice’s cure is the first of many. Using Alice as a medium and faith as fuel, The Lady cures other faithful of their illnesses including Alice’s uncle, Father Hagan ( William Sadler). It’s just like Lourdes all over again. There is a potent dreariness and listlessness that sits snugly over Banfield. It is only fitting that people there thirst for hope and long for miracles. In no distant time, the tree trunk in Banfield becomes a shrine.

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Ifeanacho MaryAnn
Ifeanacho MaryAnn

Written by Ifeanacho MaryAnn

Storyteller, Long Distance Cat Mom. A quiet voice rambling in an isolated corner of the internet. I write on psychology, films, books and my random thoughts

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