FILMING IS coming to an end on a new Irish horror film The Exorcism
Diaries, at Ballintubbert House near Stradbally Co Laois.
It was home to
the late Anglo-Irish poet and British poet laureate Cecil Day-Lewis,
father of actor Daniel Day-Lewis and documentary film-maker Tasmin
Day-Lewis.
Film director Eric Courtney said yesterday the
90-minute feature was about demonic possession involving a young girl,
but it was not of the “head spinning” variety.
It was “very, very real
in the Ken Loach style”, he said. It centres on two students who come
across an exorcism scene. The story is told from their point of view.
The film script by Martin Robinson is based on two books, The Dark
Sacrament by David Kiely and Hostage to the Devil by Malachi Martin, a
deceased former Jesuit priest from Ballylongford in Kerry. The latter
book is based on five exorcisms he witnessed.
As part of his
research for the film Mr Courtney met two Catholic priests who are
exorcists here in Ireland, Fr Pat Collins and Canon William Landrum,
with whom he discussed their experience of exorcisms.
In an
appearance on RTÉ One television’s Late Late Show in January 2006, both
priests told Pat Kenny there had been an increase in paranormal activity
in Ireland and that they were finding it difficult to meet the demand
for exorcisms.
They claimed there was a popular perception these days
that there was no such thing as ghosts, spirits or demons, and as a
result people experiencing such phenomena were not taken seriously.
They
also said they would like the church to take the matter more seriously
and train new exorcists.
Filming on The Exorcism Diaries has been
wrapping up for the past two weeks at Ballintubbert House.
Editing
should be completed by January, allowing the film to be ready for the US
and European festival circuit by the middle of next year.
In 2008
Courtney directed Seer, the story of seven strangers who wake up in a
remote house in Wexford with no memory and a tag on their wrists to tell
them their names.