Albuquerque Journal

DEMONIC GRIP

‘Possession of Hannah Grace’ tickles our collective unconsciou­s

- BY KATIE WALSH

Perfunctor­y B-movie “The Possession of Hannah Grace” isn’t exactly an earthshatt­ering entry into the wellworn genre that is the exorcism movie. It doesn’t so much as invite attention to itself as it does to the genre itself, allowing viewers to ponder the ways in which it does or does not hew to convention, and what that might mean for the state of the exorcism movie 45 years after Linda Blair puked pea soup all over our collective frontal lobes in “The Exorcist.”

Set in an environmen­t of flickering fluorescen­t lights and pockmarked poured concrete, “The Possession of Hannah Grace” isn’t really about the possession, nor is it even about Hannah Grace. The film, rather, centers on Megan Reed (Shay Mitchell), a newbie overnight intake assistant at the Boston Metro Hospital morgue whose night is rocked by the arrival of Hannah Grace’s corpse.

A prologue offers the kind of exorcism content we’re familiar with: heavy Catholic iconograph­y, chanting priests, a nubile female body writhing and lashed to a bed. That’s why the most interestin­g thing about the film, written by Brian Sieve and directed by Diederik Van Rooijen, is that it abandons all that gothic familiarit­y for a night at the morgue. Instead of a patriarcha­l priest compelling demons to get out, a young woman, riddled with PTSD and clinging to 60 days of sobriety, is just trying to get someone to believe her that something’s not right with this body.

One has to wonder just why exorcism films proliferat­e in the way they do. It’s the landmark success of “The Exorcist,” yes, but there’s something else that tickles our collective unconsciou­s: the fetishism and ritual, the bondage, the young female bodies, seemingly so permeable, so changing, so susceptibl­e to invasion by demons that sound like black metal frontmen. Anyone who denies the sexual undercurre­nt here has to answer why there are no exorcism films in which young men are possessed (or older women, for that matter).

So that’s why when “The Possession of Hannah Grace” zigs where it might historical­ly zag, landing us in the hands of the “smart, resourcefu­l,” but down-on-her-luck Megan, in a refrigerat­ed, automated meat locker, we pay attention. Hannah Grace has a bit more agency than Regan MacNeil, and Kirby Johnson gives a wonderfull­y physically embodied performanc­e as the corpse who won’t stay still.

At one point, someone wonders to Megan, “Why hasn’t she killed you?” It’s an apt question. She’s a mentally unstable young woman, struggling with addiction and anxiety and trauma — ripe for possession. But it seems that in Megan, Hannah and whatever is inside Hannah (it’s never clear) has met its match, and that’s the place where we should dive further. It’s a bit of a shame the film never draws that out with any clarity.

But for all the pondering “The Possession of Hannah Grace” inspires, it’s also true that at a quick 85 minutes, it still manages to feel tedious at times. The dour environmen­t doesn’t help, the humor doesn’t pop, and disappoint­ingly, the scares just don’t land. There are a few jumps and bumps, but there’s no real sense of dread or unease or questionin­g. We simply watch the events unfold with a full understand­ing of what’s going on. It’s unfortunat­e that “The Possession of Hannah Grace” just never fully takes hold.

 ?? COURTESY OF SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINM­ENT/CLAIRE FOLGER ?? Megan, played by Shay Mitchell, realizes that something is not right in Hannah Grace’s cadaver drawer in “The Possession of Hannah Grace.”
COURTESY OF SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINM­ENT/CLAIRE FOLGER Megan, played by Shay Mitchell, realizes that something is not right in Hannah Grace’s cadaver drawer in “The Possession of Hannah Grace.”

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