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Our Father, the Devil

"We'll meet there soon enough."

Marie Cissé (Babetida Sadjo) is a chef in a rural French nursing home. Her culinary institute mentor is now a resident there, and she’s coaxed Marie, her former star student, into making her private meals. (We learn that Marie has to tone down the seasoning for the buffet, but even so, I suspect these elderly and infirm French still eat better than many of us.) This is, on the surface, a decent life, ruffled only by bursts of crabbiness from a too-demanding boss. Marie likes her coworkers. She has friends. She has a nascent flirtation with a local bartender, and the slightest overt sign of interest from her could easily turn it into more. Her mentor even bequeaths her an idyllic country cottage.

But Marie walks down still streets in a muffled cocoon of screams and gunfire. There’s a brittleness to her, and she can shed it only for a few minutes at a time.

Her horrific past comes back to her anew with the arrival of Father Patrick (Souléymane Sy Savané), a newly assigned priest whose duties bring him into Marie’s orbit. He’s charismatic but serene, an instant hit at the nursing home, and why not? He comes to men and women living with old, lifelong regrets, and he tells them to forgive themselves for the unchangeable past. God would want them to: “We must focus on what is constructive, letting go of mistakes and failures.”

To Marie, the message can only sound self-serving. She recognizes Father Patrick. He’s Sogo, the young warlord who razed her home in Guinea to the ground. Who killed her family. Who raped and tortured her.

Our Father, the Devil makes Marie’s sense of history visceral: it has a physical manifestation in her body, strong enough that her nose bleeds and her knees give out. Sadjo gives a sublimely physical performance here—the rigidity of her face and body, the way each word comes out like she’s trying not to retch … in the early scenes, this is a horror movie, and her body is a haunted house, alternately vitiated and frenzied by its ghost.

“Damn you to hell.”
“We’ll meet there soon enough.”

Our Father, the Devil

Father Patrick comes to her kitchen when she’s all alone. He asks for more ragout—and in the buffet line, earlier, he asked for two pieces of chicken, not the usual one, and no, not that piece, the bigger one. We can see him through Marie’s eyes: a creature of endless, insatiable appetite. He makes one wrong move—a distinctive tic for cooling his food—and she knows, all at once, that he is who she thinks he is. She knocks him out and brings him to the isolated cottage, where—with enough brutality, enough moral certainty, enough time—she can finally have the upper hand.

Director Ellie Foumbi thankfully avoids turning Our Father, the Devil into an endless guessing game for its audience. Another film would make “does Marie have the right man or not?” its central concern and roll around in the ambiguity, but Foumbi knows exactly when to transition from psychological suspense to moral drama. Ultimately, she’s interested in cruelty, complicity, and how her thoroughly compromised characters can possibly bear their pasts and presents. (The cinematography by Tinx Chan does a lot to aid the direction: several of the shots are beautifully set up with the sense that the moral dilemmas are all Gordian knots waiting for a bloody strike. I especially like a sequence towards the end where power, location, and our access to the scene all seamlessly flip multiple times.)

This all feels borne of a real sense of historical horror: what happens when the atrocities are over, but the people who committed them can’t be neatly separated from you? There’s a hideous but compelling intimacy to how Marie holds Sogo—or is he Father Patrick now? Can he ever be? Does he get to be?—captive. He becomes, in a terrifying way, the person who matters most to her, whose presence and pain satisfies her so thoroughly that people say she must be in love. The film pushes all of this as far as it can go, until, with all developments and revelations finally accomplished, it lands in a place where anything it says about memory and forgiveness is far rawer, and far more difficult, than Father Patrick’s early consolations.

Our Father, the Devil is streaming on Hoopla and the Criterion Channel.