DVD 103 mins IMDB 6.0
R (Restricted)
Stigmata
MGM / UA (9/10/1999)
In Collection
#110

Seen It:
Yes
Drama, Fantasy, Horror, Mystery, Thriller
USA  /  English

Patricia Arquette Frankie Paige
Gabriel Byrne Father Andrew Kiernan
Jonathan Pryce Cardinal Daniel Houseman
Nia Long Donna Chadway
Thomas Kopache Father Durning
Rade Serbedzija Marion Petrocelli (as Rade Sherbedgia)
Enrico Colantoni Father Dario
Dick Latessa Father Gianni Delmonico
Portia de Rossi Jennifer Kelliho
Patrick Muldoon Steven
Rade Sherbedgia

Director Rupert Wainwright
Producer Frank Mancusso, JR.
Writer Tom Lazarus; Rick Ramage

Gabriel Byrne plays Father Kiernan, a young Jesuit priest whose degree in chemistry makes him a sort of priest/detective as he investigates weeping Marys and the like around the world. Meanwhile, Frankie (Patricia Arquette), a rave-generation Pittsburgher, is afflicted with the stigmata--holes that appear in her wrists, resembling the wounds of Christ. The young woman's symptoms filter back to the Vatican and Father Kiernan is assigned to the case. The priest is puzzled by Frankie's atheism; usually the stigmata only appear on the devout (hence the age-old controversy of miracles vs. hysteria). Other manifestations appear on Frankie, and the priest's cardinal (Jonathan Pryce) is brought in, leading to political maneuvering within the Church hierarchy. The film owes a large and obvious debt to The Exorcist (at one point, Frankie's bed scoots across the room and she levitates into a crucifix position), but to term it an Exorcist rip-off would be to shortchange Stigmata. The premise and screenplay are more cerebral than in the l973 film, and the source of the phenomenon is coming from a completely different place.

Unfortunately, amid Stigmata's high-octane editing and slick technique, the chills of The Exorcist aren't there, giving the movie a sort of identity crisis: horror movie or intellectual thriller? Several elements of the film challenge basic tenets of the Catholic faith, hence the brief furor that erupted at the time of the film's release; if nothing else, the internal workings of the Church are shown in a very unflattering light indeed. Byrne excels as the skeptical priest, as does Arquette as the tortured young woman. All told, Stigmata is a rather uneven effort, but one with a thought-provoking combination of theology and thrills served up in a thoroughly modern, stylish package. Fans of TV's Ally McBeal will recognize Portia DeRossi in a supporting role. --Jerry Renshaw

Edition Details
Barcode 027616745125
Region Region 1
Chapters 28
Release Date 7/17/2001
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles French; Spanish
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
Nr of Disks/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Links Amazon US
IMDB
DVD Empire

Features
Color Closed-captioned Widescreen