Film

Be social

  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Newsvine
  • Stumbleupon

Devils in Disguise

A pedophile priest and his pious protectors

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wednesday, October 11, 2006 - 7:00 pm
Evil angel: Oliver O’Grady, free in Ireland (Lionsgate)
Of all the hundreds of pedophile priests to be flushed out of the woodwork in recent Catholic Church history, Father Oliver O’Grady has to be one of the most harmless-looking, and the most sinister. Wispy, unremarkable and accommodating, with an ingratiating half-smile playing permanently about his thin lips, Father Ollie, as he was known to the California parishioners who for 20 years fed him, housed him and invariably entrusted him with the spiritual care of their children, was also a wily and ruthless predator who had sex with mothers if that got him close enough to fondle, rape and sodomize their kids, from newborn babies to teenagers. Now, after serving half of a 14-year sentence in the U.S., he lives free as a bird in Ireland, billeted with a family that knows nothing of his past, and reporting to no one — save for the Catholic Church, which has dangled a retirement annuity in front of his nose in exchange for dropping off the planet. Only, Father O’Grady has been shafted by his protectors, and he’s ready to sing like a canary. Among other things, he loves the attention.

When a major distributor like Lionsgate releases a documentary on an inflamed social issue like child molestation, one expects the worst kind of pandering to the public hysteria so skillfully exposed in Andrew Jarecki’s Capturing the Friedmans. But Amy Berg’s Deliver Us From Evil, which begins as a portrait of a damaged monster and skillfully fans out to his many victims and enablers, lifts the subject clean out of private pathology into the realm where it belongs: the rampant and systematic abuse of theological and institutional power. There’s no denying that Father Ollie is a very sick cookie with a criminal record that would have driven many a less well-defended molester to suicide long ago, whose scariest coping device is a habit of dissociation that not only allowed him to continue violating helpless children for so long, but now allows him to become a star witness against himself. We see him in videotaped testimony and with Berg, calmly recounting the where, what and how of his hundreds of conquests — one can’t call them seductions, since by the accounts of his prey, now predictably troubled adults, he simply got them to a quiet place and bent them to his will. Celibacy, currently fingered as the chief culprit in priestly abuse, is neither here nor there in Father Ollie’s case, for he freely admits (that naughty-boy smile again) that nothing in the adult body turns him on as much as the smooth flesh of a tot in a swimsuit.

For the most part, Berg is a self-effacing presence, a quiet voice prodding discreetly when O’Grady occasionally flags or dodges a tough question. But you can see her background in television news (she has worked for CNN and on 60 Minutes) in a tendency to gild the visual lily. She shoots O’Grady in a cavernous cathedral, his face in strenuously symbolic shadow, or leaning over park railings eyeballing children at play. Personally, I could have done without the stagy drama and huggy shots of O’Grady’s victims embracing before they set off on a fruitless attempt to get a sympathetic ear from the Vatican. Still, that takes the action to where it properly belongs, as Berg, armed with anguished testimony from the families of the abused and their lawyers, coolly serves up incontrovertible evidence that the church knew about O’Grady’s activities and moved him from parish to parish so as to avoid public scandal and the sabotaging of highly placed careers.

The sorry saga of stonewalling, buck passing and brazen lying that has infected the church’s response at the highest levels is old news — from Cardinal Roger Mahony, still sitting pretty today as the archbishop of Los Angeles (despite having lied through his teeth about how much he knew in the O’Grady case), to Pope Benedict (who presided over committees looking into priestly abuse before he took office) to George Bush (who granted him immunity from prosecution). But I don’t know of anyone else who has laid out the underhanded mechanics of it all in such scrupulous detail. With the aid of Father Tom Doyle, a canon lawyer, historian and activist against abuse who opened his mouth and paid a hefty career price, Berg probes deeper to show how enforced celibacy and warped attitudes toward sex create a sexualized priesthood, and how church theology — especially the Eucharist, which at once aggrandizes the priest as an intimate of Christ and infantilizes his flock — conspires with a careerist hierarchy to create fertile ground for corruption. Berg by no means excuses Father O’Grady, but she offers evidence of a devastating childhood that explains his pathology. For the ambitious creeps who allowed him to indulge it, and who still sit in office, there’s no excuse.



DELIVER US FROM EVIL | Written and directed by AMY BERG | Produced by BERG, HERMAS LASSALLE and FRANK DONNER | Released by Lionsgate | Sunset 5 and Monica 4-Plex
 
Comments

No comments

L.A. People 2008

By Laurie Ochoa

In character

Heavy on the Starch at Lola's

By Jonathan Gold

Peruvian fries with a side of rice

Kat Von D

By Lina Lecaro

Ink stained

Where to Eat Now

By Jonathan Gold

Noriyuki Sugie guest stars at Breadbar

By Jonathan Gold

But hurry ... Crudobar lasts just until May 15

Bad Rap: How Aspiring Hip-hop Star Herbie Gonzalez Got Pegged as a Manhattan Beach Murderer (168)

By PAUL TEETOR
Wed, Apr 9, 3:50 pm

Anatomy of a false confession

Doomscraper? Here Comes Hollywood's First-Ever Mega-Skyscraper (12)

By PATRICK RANGE MCDONALD
Wed, Apr 30, 4:30 pm

A community thrown into shadow and vistas of the Hollywood sign could be destroyed

The Doors? Black Flag? The Chili Peppers? Nope. L.A.'s Best Band Was Love. (8)

By JEFF WEISS
Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

The more things change . . .

A Cook's Garden (7)

By GENDY ALIMURUNG
Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

Marta Teegen is turning L.A.'s front lawns into kitchen larders

Griddle Me This (7)

By Jonathan Gold
Wed, Mar 25, 1998, 12:00 am

Japanese pizza in Torrance

Movie Reviews: Indestructible, Reprise, Water Lillies

By L.A. Weekly Film Critics
Wed, May 14, 11:54 am

Also, Unsettled, Up the Yangtze and more

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian: More Swords, Less Sorcery

By Ella Taylor
Wed, May 14, 11:59 am

Sequel ups the action and loses some magic

Behind the Scenes at the Sundance Labs

By ELLA TAYLOR
Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

Building a better screenwriter

Cannes 2008: A Brief History of the Directors' Fortnight

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, May 14, 11:58 am

Inside the other Cannes

Claude Lelouch: A Man and Another Movie

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, May 14, 12:00 pm

Roman de Gare director finally has a critical hit

• Advertisement •

Blogs

Catch of the Day

A crack in the master plan
Sat, May 17, 4:09 pm

Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily

First Place 'Narnia 2' Falls Short Friday
Sat, May 17, 12:53 am

LA Daily

Check it Out: A New Los Angeles Billboard Database
Fri, May 16, 5:01 pm

Play

Weiss' Muxtapes #3 and #4: The Best Hip-Hop Songs of the Year Thus Far
Fri, May 16, 4:00 pm

Lurker

REVOK and AUGER in Hollywood
Thu, May 15, 3:12 pm

Slideshows

Elizabeth McGrath & Scott Musgrove Opening

Billy Shire Fine Arts opening of new sculptures and paintings by Musgrove and watercolors by McGrath

LA People 2008 - Part Two

Kevin Scanlon's portraits of the people in our neighborhood

LA People 2008 - Part One

Kevin Scanlon's portraits

Claude Lelouch: A Man and Another Movie

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, May 14, 12:00 pm

Roman de Gare director finally has a critical hit

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian: More Swords, Less Sorcery

By Ella Taylor
Wed, May 14, 11:59 am

Sequel ups the action and loses some magic

Cannes 2008: A Brief History of the Directors' Fortnight

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, May 14, 11:58 am

Inside the other Cannes

Cannes 2008: Joyeux Anniversaire à la Quinzaine

By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Wed, May 14, 11:55 am

Theo Angelopoulos, Cristi Puiu and others remember the Cannes alterna-fest

Speed Racer On the Fast Track to Nowhere

By J. HOBERMAN
Wed, May 7, 4:56 pm

Anime on overdrive from the Wachowski brothers

Pat Kingsley

Wed, May 14, 12:00 pm

Flack like me

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian: More Swords, Less Sorcery

Wed, May 14, 11:59 am

Sequel ups the action and loses some magic

Behind the Scenes at the Sundance Labs

Wed, May 7, 12:00 pm

Building a better screenwriter

Ashes of Time: Fugitive Pieces

Wed, Apr 30, 2:59 pm

Novel adaptation gives Holocaust survival the Harlequin treatment

Jellyfish's Etgar Keret: The Wizard of Id

Wed, Apr 23, 12:00 pm

Writer/director shoots from the hip about his low-budget movie and his high-budget life

LA Weekly Promotions

Education Guide

From online learning to 4-year colleges, LA Weekly's Education Guide '08 has answers to all your education questions.

Opportunity Rocks Career Fair

Be the first to hear about the latest career opportunities. Click here to find your dream job!

Little Sexy Black Book

Bring sexy back with LA Weekly's guide to the sexiest spots in Los Angeles.

Living Quarters

Get the real story on LA real estate. Whether you're a renter, a buyer or a seller, Living Quarters is your guide to LA living.

Blank Blankly

Speak Freely at LA Weekly with your own Blank Blankly slogan. Consider Thoroughly, then Create Adverbially only at LA Weekly.

Career Guide

Jumpstart your career with the LA Weekly Career Guide. All the info you need to take the next step in life.

Digital Jukebox

Be. Hear. Now. Listen to the hottest bands and stay on the leading edge of LA's music scene with free streaming music from LA Weekly.

Hook Me Up

Want FREE stuff? Sign up for this week's contests and get the hook-up from LA Weekly.

Insiders

Get Inside with LA Weekly. LA Weekly Insiders has the what to do and where to go in LA. Sign up and we'll deliver Insiders right to your inbox!

LA to Vegas

What happens there starts here. LA to Vegas is your guide to living it up in Sin City.

Jonathan Gold Text Alerts

Get Jonathan Gold's restaurant picks sent right to your phone and never miss another great meal!

Restaurant Gallery

Hungry? Check out LA Weekly's Restaurant Gallery advertorial for the best grub in LA.
Backpage.com