Hail Satan? (2019) Poster

(2019)

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8/10
Not what you think
kosmasp25 September 2019
Well unless you are already familiar with the Satanic Temple that is. I wasn't and I was quite surprised. If Satanists engage in equal rights, clean the streets of trash and do things most would consider Christian ... that is quite a surprise. Even if you are not into "Satan" (and I am not), they even give you a yin/yang balance. As in, if you have this statue put up, we want one of ours there too.

Was quite surprised to learn about a lot of things and this is quite entertaining overall (there's nudity in case that matters to you one way or the other). Now after I watched the movie someone told me that the documentary shines a light on the organisation that does not include some of their darker moments. One is included when we see a member split, but there seem to be more things. For that I guess there is the internet. Or maybe a sequel to this? Who knows
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10/10
the devil is in the details
lee_eisenberg4 November 2019
I've heard loosely about the satanic panic of the 1980s (when people assumed that board games and heavy metal were turning young people into devil worshipers), and about video nasties (movies labeled excessively violent and horrific by the British government). Penny Lane's "Hail Satan?" focuses on the Satanic Temple, whose members pull pranks to emphasize free speech and religious freedom, and challenge favoritism towards specific religions. Their tenets are some of the most progressive and forward-thinking of any entity. You should definitely watch this documentary.

I wonder if anyone ever alleged that "Bewitched" promoted satanism for depicting a witch as the protagonist. Hell, someone probably found "Mr. Ed" satanic for portraying a talking animal.
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7/10
Tongue lodged firmly in it's cheek...
CinemaSerf17 November 2019
Now I will happily admit that I knew nothing about the "Satanic Temple" when I saw this preview screening. At first, I struggled to establish whether or not it was a "mockumentary" on the excesses of this movement - particularly when Lucien Greaves (surely a made up name?!) was being interviewed. I am still not entirely convinced that this isn't a hoax! What it does do, regardless, is challenge quite a few assumptions about "good" and "evil". A lot of what the Temple appears to stand for is quite laudable - from equality of worship and the disestablishment of the Christian church from the US state to improved local services and better schooling. It might actually be more of an effective social commentary rather than a critique on Satanism. Worth watching, but take with a pinch of salt!
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7/10
The Devil Made Me Do It
evanston_dad11 October 2019
I will never belong to any organized religion, but if I had to choose one, the Satanic Temple would be a strong front runner, as its seven tenets match my own personal life philosophy almost exactly.

What are those tenets, you ask? This documentary will tell you. Not surprisingly, or maybe only not surprisingly if you aren't an uptight evangelical Christian, the Satanic Temple has nothing to do with Satan the being, and its members don't actually worship him. Rather, Satan is used as a symbol of resistance against what the Temple perceives to be the system of Christian privilege that wants to establish a theocracy in America. It believes in freedom of worship, the freedom to live your life without having morals dictated to you by other people, kindness, empathy, reliance on scientific fact when forming belief systems, things like that. Sounds good, right? Well not to a lot of people out there who get their knickers in a twist about the Satanic Temple and look like total fools doing so. One thing this movie does well is convey the absolute and absolutely infuriating hypocrisy of much of the Christian community.

But idealistic as the Satanic Temple sounds, it suffers the fate of any other organized religion, which is why I avoid the whole mess. It falls prey to infighting, differing viewpoints about what the faith believes and how to spread its message, and it seems to be more focused on being against something rather than being for anything. It's more of an activist group than a church, and if this documentary is any indication, the people who flock to it resemble many of the activists I happen to know in my very liberal progressive community -- they're people who've never felt like they fit in anywhere and have big chips on their shoulders, and the sudden discovery of a bunch of other misfits like them makes them feel emboldened to start being as unpleasant as the people they purport to be protesting against.

An entertaining documentary that certainly taught me something I didn't know, but it's not overly ambitious. If you take the Christian faith seriously, you might find much to object to. If you don't, you'll probably find this movie is preaching to the choir.

Grade: A-
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7/10
Separation of church and state.
morrison-dylan-fan7 December 2020
After last week finding the superb The Guilty (2018-also reviewed) vis this method,I decided to again check what films were about to leave Netflix UK. Having heard about the doc in various newspaper reports when it came out in cinemas,I decided that before it left the site,I would join in the satanic panic.

View on the film:

Summoning the devil with juicy clips of It's a Wonderful Life (1946) and Black Sunday (1960), director Penny Lane & cinematographer Naiti Gamez wonderfully point the horns of the Satanic Temple at devilish satire.

Lane tracks the Satanic Temple's aim to get Baphomet statues (which the Temple later sued due to appearing in the Sabrina re-boot, the original of which starred future God's Not Dead 2 lead Melissa Joan Hart) standing side by side town halls which place huge stone displays of The Ten Commandments at the front entrances.

While keeping the tone of the film humorous,and skipping over the comments of a former member (banned after calling for the President to be executed in a speech) saying that the Temple has become too professional, Lane conjures spellbinding interviews with the founders of the non-violent Temple of Satan over their strong belief of the separation of church and state to remain, with members receiving death threats from Bible-thumping "peaceful" Christians,who want to send to hell any attempt to hail Satan.
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8/10
Very good and well documented of a unique type of religion!
Irishchatter22 February 2020
I watched this last month and honestly, I really thought this documentary of the satanists was really well done because we get to see the background of what it is to be in that particular type of group. Although I do admit, seeing Christianity being used as a weapon of hate to the satanists, was just appauling but at the same time, its not surprising or new so of course bashing has always been common.....

Very entertaining and educational for a Netflix show, although dont show this documentary to kids as there are some scenes quite disturbing so you have been warned in that regard!
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8/10
Another Name for Rationalism?
westsideschl24 July 2019
Occurred to me after watching that though out history if you want to stay in power create an enemy. So if you want your God to be #1 be sure he (she) has an adversary; an anti. One thing religions have in common is obedience - no thinking for yourself allowed.

Admittedly Satan has gotten a lot of bad press/reviews & even stories - print, movie, allegory over the past long while. Thus begins our tale of snake, Eve & apple.

So who/what is the new Satan? Well, they're The Satanic Temple w/small groups totally tens of thousands around the world. One goal is separation of church & state allowing all religions equal opportunity for expression. Another is promoting free thinking. Their tenants include: Compassion for all creatures; justice should be foremost; each of us commands our own bodies; respect other's freedoms; science factuality should be a part of your beliefs; mistakes are correctable; compassion, wisdom come first.

The Satanic Temples main adversaries come in the form of Fox News & Catholic Church (their record w/wars, gays, females, trials, priests & kids - not so good). One of Fox friends' vitriolic arguments is that our currency & pledge both reference their God as our national religion, but the Constitution purposefully stays away on that subject. God was added around the accusatory McCarthy era '50s as a counter to Communism.

It was repeatedly suggested in the doc that they should all (as non-Christians) go to Hell, but would that include Gandhi?
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7/10
Hail Satan fiendishly chronicles the establishment and growth of a contemporary ideology searching for national pluralism.
TheMovieDiorama10 June 2020
Who or what is Satan? Decades of media representation, including film, television and illustrations, perpetuate the "demonic prince of evil spirits" to be the villainous archetype within religious foundations, primarily denominations of Christianity. The antithesis of God's teachings. From a traditional perspective however, the etymology behind Satan derives from the Bible, the very passage of text that Christianity was founded upon. A fallen angel who rebelled against God and was cast out of heaven, becoming an adversary in the process. An opposite. An entity that challenged God and his ideologies. Given the naivety and susceptibility of modern societies, the core original depiction of Satan's creation and dogma was, ironically, casted out and instead opted for the the crimson red horned demonic villain that epitomised the sins of humanity.

But forget about the religious pretext. God versus Satan? Let's ignore that. Many countries in the world are fortunate enough to have religious freedom. Pluralism. The ability to believe in a religion that does not conform to the national faith. Secularity. The United States believed its constitutional rights were founded upon Christian commandments, which is factually incorrect, and therefore the state has endorsed the privilege of the Christian right. Christian theocracy slowly relinquishing the power of democracy and transforming its freedom into the tyranny of totalitarianism. The Satanic Temple, the organisation that director Lane follows for her documentary, recognise this as a fundamental declination in societal power. Their primary motive is not to "rape and murder children" or "drink the fresh blood of humans", as the media might suggest. No. To follow modern Satanism is to preserve the separation of church and state. To embrace equality. To reassure freethinkers. What initially was conceived as a practical joke, harnessing the rebellious nature of its members to produce mischievous humour (such as enabling same-sex couples to kiss over the gravestone of the founder of the controversial Westboro Baptist Church), soon became a religious movement. A battle for social justice. Thousands joining a civic crusade, enclasping the iconography of Baphomet.

Given my personal preconceived notions regarding the codification of Satanism, which undoubtedly conformed to devout Christian society's general consensus, Lane's documentary unequivocally changed my perspective on, well, everything. Through an intelligently constructed narrative, that chronicles the conceptualisation and progression of such political activism, and humane method of granting her interviewees, members of the Temple, characterisation through light-hearted conversations, Lane successfully conveys their motives whilst challenging the current state. A broad documentary tackling the foundational roots of the American constitution, the widespread view of "Satanic panic" (laughably angering now considering the uncovering of Catholic priests molesting children), the arduous battle for pluralism against a theocratic state and the inner workings of the Temple itself.

The wide scope of related strands connecting the organisation to the viewer, is regrettably too extensive for such a short runtime. Some elements, notably the sociopolitical duels and the blatant propagandistic history behind the American constitution, were highly engaging due to the meticulous usage of consequential footage and proposed narrational social perturbation. Others, such as a Temple member inciting extremist behaviour to skew the organisation's non-violent methodologies and the declaration of the "Seven Satanic Tenets" (undoubtedly a superior modernisation of the Ten Commandments), were underdeveloped and diminished the longevity of the more captivating aspects. Lane incorporates a swift pace that moves every strand along briskly which, as mentioned above, is unable to substantiate the more menial interruptions.

Regardless, Lane has accomplished the near impossible. To pragmatically allow an organisation to promote egalitarianism, the jurisprudential concept of Disestablishmentarianism within the US and to invoke social justice. By giving co-founder Lucien Greaves (pseudonym for safety precautions) a platform, Lane has granted him and his benevolent organisation an opportunity for their articulate voices to be heard. Whilst the documentary itself may be uneven, the ideology remains intact. A freedom that, today, seems more apt than ever. And with that, there's only thing left to say. "Hail Satan!".
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7/10
Starts Cheesy But Gets Better
damianphelps10 April 2021
This documovie has plenty of cheesy moments but these are countered by discussions around equity of religious beliefs and for people to have the right to believe what they want without favouritism towards one particular religion.

Their points whilst often presented poorly are fair and reasonable.

Put down your torches and stop burning books long enough to open your mind to discussion. You can make your conclusions at the end.
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7/10
In search of the separation of church and state
paul-allaer11 May 2019
"Hail Satan?" (2019 release; 95 min.) is a documentary about the Satanic Temple (TST) and its search for the separation of church and state. As the movie opens, we are in "Tallahassee, 2013" where TST is holding a rally on the steps of the Florida statehouse. Hardly anyone is giving it any attention. We are introduced to Lucien, the spokesperson for TST. When TST wants to do a black mass in Boston, the catholic church and community in Boston organizes a massive protest against "these rapists and murderers", while of course the reality is that the Boston catholic church has allowed sexual abuse against young kids for decades and decades... At this point we are 10 min. into the movie, but to tell you more of the plot would spoil your viewing experience, you'll jut have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

Couple of comments: this is the latest documentary from Penny Lane, who previously brought us "Our Nixon". Here she explores the hypocrisy in certain segments of the population, who are easily riled up by these satanists. Lane along the way brings us a History 101 of satanism. The core of the film goes to looking at the separation of church and state, which TST wants enforced. The segments dealing with the 10 Commandments are instrumental. So this documentary is not quite what I expected it to be, and in fact is likely to make you think about a few things in a way that you might not have expected. Kudos to Lane for that.

"Hail Satan?" premiered at the Sundance festival earlier this yer to positive acclaim, and recently opened at my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati. The Friday early evening screening where I saw this at was attended poorly (6 people, including myself). Hopefully this can gain a larger audience as it is released on other platforms. If you like documentaries, or have an interest in issues surrounding the separation of church and state, I'd readily suggest you check this out, be it in the theater (if you still can), on VOD, or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray, and draw your own conclusion.
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7/10
I recommend giving this a viewing. It'll make you think.
kevin_robbins20 May 2021
So I watched this on Hulu after the strong recommendation by Edward Delgado. There is a lot going on here about religion in the United States and the way certain institutions receive preferential treatment. I agree with Chapos review in that it's hard to tell if what they're doing is in belief of satan or just to prove the inequities of the "American Way." I actually think I may swing by their headquarters in Salem one of these days. Overall I recommend giving this a viewing. It'll make you think. I'd give it a 7/10.
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7/10
Hail Satan
henry8-317 December 2019
Documentary charting the works of the The Satanic Temple in the U.S.

Fascinating, often hilarious look at this group who are against evil and any form of violence and seek to promote the right to religious freedom in a country moving ever closer to right wing Christianity becoming enshrined in law, contrary to the constitution. The 7 tenets that the Group live by make perfect sense in a modern society but there is seemingly no place for this in a modern country like the U.S.

The arguments as to why they refer themselves as Satanists when they apparently aren't, are less convincing, which is particularly frustrating given that it is the Christian Witch Hunters that define their crimes, but otherwise they are a group to be admired in a film worth catching.

Interesting, funny and not a little worrying.
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3/10
RADICAL RESISTANCE
kirbylee70-599-5261794 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
One thing that should be brought up immediately when discussing the film HAIL SATAN? The movie is about The Satanic Temple and yet has virtually nothing to do with the religious character of Satan. Instead the film is a documentary about the group as a radical political group who chose the name with the intent of upsetting and poking a figure into the eye of the religious right.

The Satanic Temple were co-founded by Lucien Greaves and Malcolm Jarry with Greaves taking the role of front man for the organization. Self-proclaimed atheists the pair make it their mission to take on the religious groups for what they consider infringing on their rights and the separation of church and state. In their view the two entities should never mingle and all things religious should be removed from public locations or other icons should be allowed to co-exist in the same place.

The films shows the group beginning as a sort of merry prankster type organization that just wants to ridicule and attack those they disagree with. But as it progresses we see that the more people that join the more serious their views on things solidify and become more meaningful to their members.

One of the center pieces of the film you've most likely heard about and that is the construction and emplacement of a statue of Baphomet at the state capitol in Arkansas. Their desire was to have this statue of a horned satanic goat creature located next to the statue of the Ten Commandments there. While the claim is that they believe in their religious freedom to do so it's painfully obvious this is a way to thumb their noses at those who have religious convictions.

As the film progresses we see some of the other events that the group has promoted. One is an after school Satan club complete with coloring books and another a "Menstruatin' with Satan" program that provides feminine sanitary products for women. In the eyes of the group and the director of this film, this is simply trolling those who they seek to offend and upset, harmless harassment of people they consider rubes for believing the way they do.

But something amusing does actually take place as the film nears its end. The group has become so large that this anarchistic organization formed to stick it to those tethered by rules and regulations suddenly becomes the entity they seek to destroy. They come up with their own set of rules to be followed. When the leader of the Detroit chapter violates one of those rules by calling for the assassination of the President, she is kicked out of the organization. The group has gone full circle and become that which they claim to hate the most.

Perhaps it's showing my age but as I watched the members of the group rattle off about their beliefs and the organization I felt like I was watching a large group of malcontents who looked like the kids most picked on while in high school. I don't know how to describe it. It's not the tattoos or body piercings that make one believe this (I know plenty of people with both) but their general attitude towards things. They might have legal legs to stand on in the various events they stage but at the same time after watching this film I find it hard to believe they do them out of concern and more out of just an attempt to garner attention for themselves and laugh at others as if they're above it all.

Would I recommend this film? Sure. It gives people a chance to see how ridiculous a group like this can be. Or if you're a believer in the organization you'll cheer for their antics. They distance themselves from the religious version of Satan but have no problem using icons or ceremonies that have ties. In the end it's a movie about people who seem to have nothing better to do than make waves.
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Interesting
ersbel1 August 2019
I love those guys, but the documentary is so and so. The story goes steady, but at about two thirds it fizzes out. Well, reality is hard to fit into a certain dramatic mood, but the story goes into multiple directions and it misses the point.
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9/10
Hail Separation Of Church And State!
Pairic29 August 2019
Hail Satan? If you're expecting Satan Worship or human sacrifices then you will be disappointed. The Satanic Temple are Secular Humanists who defend Religious Freedom. Their point is that no one religion should be privileged above all the others. Their campaigns to erect statues of Baphomet next to Ten Commandments monuments on State property is part of the fight against the privileged position of Christianity in the US (and now in other countries). The satanic Temple did start off with stunts such as supposedly supporting Florida's fundamentalist Governor Rick Scott and holding a Black Mass in Boston but now is more careful about how it organises protests and has a strict code of conduct for it's Chapters to adhere to. This has caused a split with some of the temple's more militant Detroit members.



The Boston Black Mass provoked an incredible reaction from the local RCC Arch-Diocese, with mass parades, and descriptions of the Black Mass as an attack on Catholics. Rather hypocritical given the history of abuse and cover ups by the RCC in Boston. Indeed those who turned out to protest against the Satanists looked far weirder than the Temple supporters. This is also evident in Arkansas where the "Christians" tend to carry Confederate flags. Death threats against the Temple are common and it's main spokesman Lucien Greaves had to wear a Kevlar jacket at the Little Rock Arkansas demonstration.

Many Temple members speak to camera giving their reasons for joining, they are united in a love for freedom and tolerance. Some are ex-Pastors and Sunday School Teachers. One of those prepared to identify himself is an Ex-Muslim, he is really taking a risk in his support for Religious Diversity.

The director Penny Lane as well as supporting the Temple was moved to make this film out of a desire to expose the Satanic panic of the 1970s - 90s and how it destroyed lives through false accusations and resulted in many people serving long sentences. She emphasies that there has been no apology from either the State, Federal, Court or Church bodies involved. Even playing Dungeons and Dragons or having an interest in Heavy Metal music was accepted as evidence of Satanic behaviour.

A powerful film with many inspiring images and messages. These Satanists stand for Religious and Political Freedoms, for the separation of Church and State. See it! 8.5/10.
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8/10
Undeniably Compelling
truemythmedia5 December 2019
This documentary is an eye-opening look at a rising controversial group, and I, personally, and very glad I watched this film, for it helped me to better understand what that group is about. I don't agree with a lot of stuff that they do in this film, but that didn't keep me from finding it fascinating. I do think that Lucien and his Temple have plenty of valid points, and maybe this will help our country heal a bit in the long run; maybe he, like Lucifer in Milton's Paradise Lost, is the evil that helps to push humanity to eventually find its salvation.
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It is 2017. Satanism is harldy provocative
random-707784 August 2019
Seriously what is with the midwest? If yo are going to be satanists, have a full bacchanal or a human sacrifice at least. A bunch of fat and boring people with plastic horns? Both sides of this utterly pedestrian and boring conflict in this film look like they stepped out of walmart. Two sets of superstitious people wagging their fingers at each other. Not edifying and not entertaining. These "Satanists" are about 500 years too late.
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8/10
Great documentation
mrdonleone29 September 2019
The Church of Satan: saving us all or sending us to hell??? Worth the personal pondering about; for me as a filmmaker i just like how they made a wonderful documentary out of it, maybe the best around the widely spread concept of Satanism ever.
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10/10
An Abomination in God's Eyes
begob31 December 2019
Let's not pussyfoot around here. These people are freaks. They walk around naked in their stupid clothes, they wave banners that disrespect others, they manipulate the media, they play music with disguised messages celebrating some shadowy supernatural figure, and they just think they're better than everyone else. And then there's the Satanists.
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8/10
Extremely compelling and eye-opening
Jeremy_Urquhart9 October 2021
This is a fantastic (and rare) example of what documentaries at their best can make you do: see and consider things from another perspective; maybe one you weren't even aware of.

I definitely didn't understand satanism at all prior to this, and while, as a documentary, this likely isn't objective and could be seen to overly favour satanism, it's justified in being a look at the community from within that community. Even if this wasn't 100% accurate, it still holds value as a film that can show you an under discussed perspective.

It's entertaining, well shot, and very compelling for most of its runtime. Ends up being an interesting look into religion's abundance in American society, too.

Absolutely going to watch more documentaries from its director, Penny Lane (amazing name, too), because she made a pretty great one here.
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8/10
Despite this movie's title it shows nor says anything blasphemous. The movement, however, uses symbols bound to confuse people to think they are really Satan's followers
JvH4825 February 2019
Saw this at the Rotterdam film festival 2019, where it was part of the Big Screen Competition (but another film got the price). There is nothing blasphemous in this movie, though one could derive it from the title, especially when overlooking the question mark. Nevertheless, this movement gives rise to frequent controversy, as shown in many examples. Such an amount of resistance can be readily expected in a country where "In God we trust" signs are everywhere, on banknotes, in governmental buildings and many other public places. The mere existence of this sentence all over the country, is always the standard argument against The Satanic Temple (TST for short), to point out they have no place in the USA, and even to suggest they are unconstitutional.

The seemingly obvious fact that religion and the existence of God is laid down by the Founding Fathers and hence in the Constitution, proves incorrect as per the talking heads (I did not verify it). The binding role of religion came about in the 1950-ies as a determining (uniting) factor in the days that Communism was deemed something dangerous, the "red scare" as it was perceived at the time. Think of McCarthyism and more such political phases in USA's history. In 1956 US Congress made "In God We Trust" the national motto.

TST fights for separation between religion and state, and they lay their fingers on many aspects of life that are (inadvertenly?) grounded on Christian beliefs. USA may advertise adhering a strict separation between religion and state, in practice it is not. Take for example the prayer in schools, which should also be allowed to be led by someone belonging to a non-Christian belief. Thus, by extension, prayers could also be led by someone from TST. Be that as it may, a negative side effect of this (in my opinion) is that TST outings state that one could also praise Satan in those prayers. This will inevitably lead to uproar, being purposely controversial in its choice of words. So, though their basically proper intentions about separation of religion and state, they also create resistance while bordering on what is allowed versus what is frown upon in "standard" religions. The naming of their TST movement alone is evoking resistance, both from people basically supporting their principles, and (even more so) also by everyone else balking on their name, their rituals, and particularly the "black mass" events they organize.

As a documentary, this movie does a good job in showing many aspects of this movement, regardless of being against them, for them, or somewhere in the middle. As I wrote in previous paragraphs, I see their cause and what they stand for, but their attributes and their outings are deliberately confrontational. This is not really helpful in spreading their word. Each time when Satan is mentioned or when satanic symbols are shown, resistance can be expected, with the result that their actual cause is overlooked and drowned in the upheaval.
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10/10
Fantastic Film
baileycrawly24 January 2021
What's truly sad when you talk about a documentary like "Hail Satan?" is the 1-star reviews from "concerned Christians" who either didn't watch the movie or were so insistent on having their own beliefs represented and satisfied that they completely missed the point of not just the film, but of the organization for which it represents. This is a really great look into the Satanic Temple. It covers a lot of ground in its relatively short running time. It details, in as much detail as any intelligent human being could ever need, the beliefs of the organization as well as the things they stand for. No longer is Satanism a closeted belief system wherein society lives in perpetual fear of their animals and young children going missing and being sacrificed to the Lord of Darkness. In fact, when you talk about The Satanic Temple, you're not even talking about a group of people who believe in the devil. They view "Satan" simply as an adversarial being, and their core message is very simple: If you open the door for God, you have to be willing to open the door for Satan. This film is an example of a struggle for equality in society, a governmental fight to have equal religious representation. Perhaps the finest moment in the film is the discussion on the Ten Commandments monument that The Satanic Temple fought in court. The short of it is that there was a monument, which was donated to the state Capitol by Paramount Pictures following the release of their "Ten Commandments" film in the 50s with Charlton Heston. The Satanic Temple, seeing the blatant support of Christianity, constructed a large monument of Baphomet and had to fight to be included on the state grounds. It's little things like these that really represent what the organization stands for, and for anyone who has any kind of misconceptions otherwise it's recommended that you check this film out.. You can agree with their belief system or you can be opposed in every possible way, but to say that they bring nothing of value to the table or that they are, in any way, shape or form, a threat to society or to "the children" (everyone loves to clutch their pearls and whine about "thinking of the children," as though they can't make their own decisions). They exist, they are as valid as everyone else, and they deserve to be heard and given consideration to just like any other human beings on the planet. Whether you believe they should or not. Lucien Greaves is running a really great organization that uses symbolism and titles to shock, offend and, most importantly, to troll. And Christians around the world have taken that bait. Over and over and over again. And they'll continue to do so. Just shut up and watch the film.
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Hail Satan? (2019) - 7.0
bradeybonnell20 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Hail Satan? (2019) - 7.0

Act 1 - 7.1

Act 2 - 7.3

Act 3 - 6.6

Opens with a satanic cult that appears to be a joke backing politician Rick Scott

Became national news

Started as a media stunt with an actor and then things got real, a real religious group

The Satanic Temple messed with the Westboro Baptist Church

Want to challenge America's government and their religious beliefs

Interesting interpretation of ones look on the story of Adam and Eve

A lot of these people do seem like social losers who just wanted to join a club

I do agree with their right to do this even though they look stupid but some of them do stand for equality

Want to give all religions an equal opportunity and make people realize that they are biased

Shows how stupid people are being afraid of something that they just don't understand

A lot of cases of them just helping people and doing good in the community

Don't actually believe in Satan it's just a name

Their 7 Tenets are very logical and caring

Fight of the Ten Commandments monuments is pretty ridiculous and funny how much people care

Had to kick a leader out for says they wanted to kill the president as they don't condone violent

Movie loses its way in the third car but still drives the point home

Plenty of good points and ideas in this film
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7/10
More fun for them than us
anthonyjlangford3 September 2019
Quite an interesting documentary but let's be honest here, to believe in Satan you therefore have to believe in the idea of God and the followers of The Satanic Temple are merely a bunch of atheists looking to have some fun.

If anything it's about the need for connection and believing in something greater than oneself. These guys don't believe in Satan. They just want to be different. That just want to challenge the status quo, as is embedded in certain parts of America.

While I am personally an atheist, I do think it's a little disrespectful to make fun at someone else's beliefs. Would the same people mock followers of Islam or Buddhism? I think not. Christianity has become a soft target. And while many bad things have been done in the name of organised religion, including horrendous abuses by priests and the like, for the most part, Christians are decent people.

I do quite like the charismatic figures at the centre of this documentary and also believe that this following is made up of decent people. But let's not kid ourselves. There's not a real Satanist amongst them.
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1/10
christians being christians and other weird stuff
AziziOthmanMY28 July 2019
If satanists doesn't have a chance how the hell other religions will? funny look on how religion impacts justice and equality
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