Stigmata

Stigmata(1999)

R
09/02/1999 (US)Horror, Thriller, Fantasy1h 43m
6.3

"The messenger must be silenced."

Overview

A young woman with no strong religious beliefs, Frankie Paige begins having strange and violent experiences, showing signs of the wounds that Jesus received when crucified. When the Vatican gets word of Frankie's situation, a high-ranking cardinal requests that the Rev. Andrew Kiernan investigate her case. Soon Kiernan realizes that very sinister forces are at work, and tries to rescue Frankie from the entity that is plaguing her.

Rupert Wainwright

Director

Tom Lazarus

Screenplay

Rick Ramage

Screenplay

Tom Lazarus

Story

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Media

Stigmata (1999) Original Trailer [FHD]

Stigmata (1999) Original Trailer [FHD]

Trailer

Frankie's Hallucination

Frankie's Hallucination

Clip

Father Andrew Notices Something Strange In The Church

Father Andrew Notices Something Strange In The Church

Clip

Original Theatrical Trailer

Original Theatrical Trailer

Teaser

Frankie Possessed

Frankie Possessed

Clip

Frankie's Subway Attack

Frankie's Subway Attack

Clip

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Teaser

Cast and Crew Interviews - Patricia Arquette

Cast and Crew Interviews - Patricia Arquette

Featurette

Social

W
A review by Wuchak
8.0

Written on March 14, 2019

***The Kingdom of God is within you and around you***

A hedonistic hair stylist in Pittsburgh (Patricia Arquette) experiences stigmata, the manifestations of the various wounds of Christ, which compels the Vatican to send an investigator (Gabriel Byrne).

“Stigmata” (1999) is Christian-oriented mystery/horror, coming across as a meshing of the tone of “Eye of the Beholder” (1998) and the themes of “The Seventh Sign” (1988). But also brings to mind the contemporaneous “End of Days” (1999), albeit more rooted in drama than overblown action thrills. “The Mothman Prophecies” (2002) is another reference point, but the brilliance of the eerie “Mothman” was its confidence in understatement whereas “Stigmata” overdoes it in some sequences, I guess to appeal to those with ADHD.

Nevertheless, director Rupert Wainwright knows how to make a flashy, good-looking flick. The simple-yet-profound moral at the end makes it even better and I agree with it wholeheartedly.

The film runs 1 hour, 43 minutes.

GRADE: B+/A