Cinematic Doctrine

Drag Me to Hell - Shame, Consequence, and Body Fluids


Listen Later

Send us a Question!

MOVIE DISCUSSION: 

Melanie joins Melvin to talk Sam Raimi's 2009 return-to-horror feature Drag Me to Hell, a film so silly it disorients most viewers, including Melanie! From slapstick violence to cartoon gore, this movie surprised its PG-13 audience from start to finish! 

Topics:

  • (PATREON EXCLUSIVE) 18-minutes discussing AMC Theater's new tiered-seating price points, from value-pricing at the front to premium-pricing at the center (PATREON EXCLUSIVE) 
  • Melanie has specifically told Melvin that Drag Me to Hell was a movie she hated. Has that changed? 
  • Melvin gives some background to the Sam Raimi style, something that no doubt shocks and stuns the unprepared. 
  • The hyperbole of Drag Me to Hell helps exemplify the subtle yet damning ways in which people can disregard one another, or put oneself before others, and all of this is made exceedingly evident in the complicating incident. 
  • Melanie, "It was so funny and I think I was just able to appreciate the more comedic elements of the film. There were still a few jump scares here or there, but you get startled and then you laugh." 
  • Sometimes, people are ashamed of things they don't necessarily have to be ashamed about, while also not being ashamed about things they ought to. Drag Me to Hell displays both of these from opening to closing credits. 
  • Christine thinks that demanding the old woman to forgive her will somehow fix the curse, but demanding someone to forgive you for your sin isn't repentance, because repentance is a full-on submission to wrong-doing, which categorically removes the ability for demands. With this in mind, Christine shows she hasn't learned anything.
  • What makes an ending satisfying, and must the hero always succeed?
  • Horror movies are interesting because whereas other movies will have some alien or virus or an idea as the villain, horror movies pick obvious things like murderers, demons, or the literal devil. As Christians - and it may sound weird for others to hear - but having hell or the devil as a literary consequence or threat is often more realistic to our daily life, and thus makes horror movies sometimes more intriguing.

Recommendations:

  • Cry_Wolf (2005) (Movie)
  • Wind River (2017) (Movie)

Support the show

Support on Patreon for Unique Perks!

  • Early access to uncut episodes
  • Vote on a movie/show we review
  • One-time reward of two Cinematic Doctrine Stickers & Pins

Social Links:

  • Threads
  • Website
  • Substack
  • Instagram
  • Facebook Group
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Cinematic DoctrineBy CINDOC

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

24 ratings


More shows like Cinematic Doctrine

View all
The Holy Post by Phil Vischer

The Holy Post

4,304 Listeners

The Russell Moore Show by Christianity Today, Russell Moore

The Russell Moore Show

1,018 Listeners

Truce - History of the Christian Church by Chris Staron

Truce - History of the Christian Church

299 Listeners

Ask NT Wright Anything by Premier Unbelievable

Ask NT Wright Anything

1,984 Listeners

The Pour Over by The Pour Over

The Pour Over

3,914 Listeners

The Bulletin by Christianity Today

The Bulletin

486 Listeners

Curiously Kaitlyn by Kaitlyn Schiess

Curiously Kaitlyn

817 Listeners

The Esau McCaulley Podcast by Esau McCaulley

The Esau McCaulley Podcast

524 Listeners

Sons of Patriarchy by Peter Bell

Sons of Patriarchy

459 Listeners

Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by Christianity Today

Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

854 Listeners

Liberty Lost by Wondery

Liberty Lost

1,601 Listeners