The Teutonic knights massacre a village of people plagued with the sign of stigmata for they represent demonic possession and witchcraft. The village bodies are piled within a massive hole as their grave with a church, constructed by an alchemist, to hold any demonic uprising that might take place due to outside human disturbance. That outside human disturbance occurs centuries later as the Catholic Cathedral is under heavy renovation with Evan, a man whose knowledge of history and folklore is vast, finds the housing of the villagers' crypt accidentally unleashing a demonic force that overwhelms him. He later closes the interrupted hole, but Evan has been invaded by such a strong demonic force, it overtakes him with little of who he once was left. His recent lover, and painting re-constructionist Lisa(Barbara Cupisti), receives a visit from a goat demon which later vanishes when cops arrive on the scene. Hermann, the Sacristan(Roberto Corbiletto)is looking for his trouble-making daughter, Lotte(Asia Argento..even as a young teen she was photographed as a sex symbol)when he runs up on possessed Evan who attacks him. It seems that if anyone is attacked by someone possessed, they in turn are possessed. Hermann, trying desperately to fight the evil inside him, decides to use a jackhammer as a suicidal weapon and through the reverberation of the massive tool, the church's locking mechanism(designed by the alchemist at the church's demand)closes the Cathedral with various characters who were within it trapped unwillingly. With seemingly no exit, many of the worried characters try to search for one while a still-alive Hermann comes up to attack anyone in his way. Father Gus(Hugh Quarshie), the level-headed priest who must figure out how to escape the church, tries to understand the mysteries and horrors taking place by searching for clues through the various encryptions inside statues and parchments discovered hidden. The Bishop(Feodor Chaliapin Jr)knows more than he's saying and Gus will have to find out the truths by him. Meanwhile, Lotte might discover the truth about what occurred centuries ago regarding the knights and their role in what is occurring, since we saw early on her ancestor on the verge of being killed since she was a member of the village..this might open the doors regarding reincarnation with Lotte looking through the eyes of another who saw the horrors first hand.
To be honest, I was conflicted with Soavi's film. It's rife with powerful, unforgettable images, mainly through the hallucinations of those possessed. Such images include Evan, imagined as a serpent with wings closing a naked woman in his grasp, a goat demon having sex with a possessed, entranced Lisa, a woman whose beauty defines her seeing an image of a haggard old lady which results in her tearing away at he facial skin, and a woman being smashed by an on coming subway below the church. But, the narrative is messy and often characters, such as the children, are either forgotten or abandoned. Take Radice's Reverend who seems on the verge of being attacked by something for which we never see him again or where the children are seen goofing off in boredom then later vanish without a trace. The score by Goblin(with participation from the great Philip Glass)is absolutely stunning and hypnotic..a major asset to a flawed, but ambitious horror flick. The church itself is captured amazingly by Soavi's talented camera eye and the building is constructed with such creepy, ominous statues and demonic paintings(not to mention, the way the church locks once the alchemist's mechanism is triggered..this must've been quite difficult to construct). That's both a joy and problem, however, because it seems the filmmakers pay more attention to how the film looks and feels instead of a stronger more cohesive narrative. The screenplay doesn't seem as well constructed as the Cathedral.