
In Villach in the year 1235, three women are accused of witchcraft
by a priest. While one claims to be a witch through persuasion from the
church, one denies it, another does neither and curses the priest. He
orders them hanged and drowned. That done, he urges the guards to pull
them back up for a ritual to make sure the so-called witches never come
back to life. The guards refuse, claiming they are dead enough. The
priest returns late at night to perform the ritual. One of the corpses,
one of a hag with a blind eye suffers a seizure but dies, while another
corpse, a younger woman, takes on a demonic appearance and kills the
priest and burns his book with the rites in it.
In the 14th century, German Teutonic Knights
Sir Behmen von Bleibruck (Cage) and Sir Felson (Perlman) are engaged on
a crusade, taking part in several different battles throughout the
1330's (1332 Gulf of Edremit, 1334 Siege of Tripoli, 1337 Imbros &
1339 Artah) and eventually in the Smyrniote crusades. After witnessing the massacre of civilians during the 1344 capture of Smyrna, the two knights desert the Order and the crusade and return to Austria.
While traveling through Styria, Behmen and Felson encounter the grotesque sight of people infected with the Black Death and discover that the Holy Roman Empire
has been swept by the plague. They enter an unnamed town, trying to
conceal their identity as deserters, but are revealed as knights by the
crest on Behmen's sword. They are arrested and taken to Cardinal
D'Ambroise, who is infected with the plague. The Cardinal asks the
knights to escort an alleged witch suspected of causing the plague to a
remote monastery, where an elite group of monks reside. These monks can
determine if the girl is truly a witch, and if she is found guilty, know
a sacred ritual to cancel her powers and stop the plague that is
devastating Europe. The two knights agree under the condition she be
given a fair trial and that the charges of desertion against them be
dropped. The Cardinal agrees and they set out accompanied by a priest,
Debelzaq; a young altar boy, Kay von Wollenbarth, who wants to become a
knight like his deceased father; a knight, Sir Johann Eckhardt, whose
family was killed by the plague; and the well-traveled swindler
Hagamar, who will serve as their guide to the monastery in return for a
pardon. The witch, a young girl later identified as Anna from Marburg, shows hatred towards Debelzaq and forms a bond with Behmen.
Shortly after setting off, the group camp for the night. Johann
decides to take first watch. When Debelzaq comes to relieve him of the
watch, Johann says how much she reminds him of his dead daughter, then
goes on to speak of the politics of her trial, and how the Church cannot
have her not be guilty. Johann decides to give up the mission and goes
to convince the others to do the same, leaving Anna alone with Debelzaq.
Anna becomes hysterical at the prospect of being left alone with
Debelzaq. She attacks him and grabs his key to the cage, then escapes,
fleeing toward a nearby village. The search for her leads the group to a
mass grave, where Johann has visions of his dead daughter. Chasing the
visions, he impales himself on Kay's sword and dies. When they recapture
her, the tearful Anna explains that she only ran away for fear of
Debelzaq. However the group gradually becomes less trusting of her. They
cross a rickety rope bridge, where Anna saves Kay from falling to his
death by grabbing him with one hand, showing unnatural strength. The
group enters the dark forest called Wormwood, where Hagamar attempts to
kill Anna so that the group can go home, only to be stopped by the
others. Anna appears to summon monstrous wolves, which chase the group
and kill Hagamar. An enraged Behmen tries to kill Anna, but is stopped
by Debelzaq and Felson, who point out that the monastery is in sight.
At the monastery, the men find that all the monks have been killed by the plague, but locate the Key of Solomon,
an ancient book filled with holy rituals used to defeat evil. The men
confront Anna, and Debelzaq begins to perform a ritual used on witches.
However, as Anna begins precisely recounting Behmen's past actions
during the Crusades, Debelzaq realizes that she is not a witch, and
begins frantically performing an exorcism. However, the demon that is possessing
Anna reveals himself and melts the metal of the cage. He fights off the
knights effortlessly, but when Debelzaq throws a vial of holy water
on him, the demon flies out of sight. As the men search for the demon,
they realize he is not trying to escape, but to destroy the book so that
nothing can stop his powers. They find a room where the monks were
writing copies of the book, where the demon, revealing himself to be Baal,
destroys the copies and possesses the dead monks' bodies to use as
weapons. The three men fight the possessed monks while Debelzaq
continues the exorcism ritual. During the fight, Baal/Anna breaks
Debelzaq's neck, then kills Felson. Kay gathers the book and continues
the ritual, while Behmen continues fighting Baal/Anna. Behmen is
mortally wounded during the fight, but Kay is able to finish the ritual
and Baal is expelled from Anna's body, freeing her. After Baal's defeat,
Behmen asks Kay to keep Anna safe before dying.
Their fallen friends have been buried and Anna asks Kay to tell her
about the men who saved her, so they depart from the monastery with the
book.
Cast
- Nicolas Cage as Behmen von Bleibruck
- Ron Perlman as Felson
- Robert Sheehan as Kay von Wollenbarth
- Claire Foy as Anna
- Stephen Campbell Moore as Debelzaq
- Ulrich Thomsen as Johann Eckhardt
- Stephen Graham as Hagamar
- Christopher Lee as Cardinal D'Ambroise
- Simone Kirby as Midwife in Villach
- Nick Sidi as Priest in Villach
- Rory McCann as Soldier Commander in Villach
- BrÃan F. O'Byrne as Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.