The Possession -2012-2012 < 2027 >

Released in August 2012, The Possession arrived during a renaissance of critically engaged horror (e.g., The Conjuring , Sinister , Insidious ). However, unlike films that utilized Catholic demonology or vague pagan entities, The Possession centered on the Jewish dybbuk —a soul that cannot find rest and thus inhabits the living. Directed by Dane Ole Bornedal ( Nightwatch ) and produced by Sam Raimi, the film follows Clyde (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), a recently divorced father, whose young daughter Emily (Natasha Calis) buys a carved wooden box at a yard sale. Unbeknownst to the family, the box contains a dybbuk , which proceeds to possess Emily, leading to a desperate exorcism ( gerush ) performed by a Hasidic Jewish community.

Cinematographically, Bornedal emphasizes closed spaces: the box’s interior, the glass case at the antique store, the pantry where Emily first convulses, and finally the sealed motel room where the exorcism occurs. This visual motif of containment mirrors the family’s refusal to openly discuss the divorce. The dybbuk is “trapped” until Emily opens it—just as the family’s anger is trapped until it erupts through her. The entity’s signature act (forcing Emily to eat raw meat, moths, and a glass shard) represents the internalization of poison; she literally consumes the family’s unresolved bitterness. The Possession -2012-2012

A controversial aspect of The Possession is its use of Orthodox Jewish ritual as a source of horror and salvation. The film employs Rabbi Wyne as a consultant, lending authenticity to the exorcism scene (which includes the blowing of a shofar , recitation of Psalm 91, and the burning of a white candle). However, the film also participates in a problematic trope: the “ethnic expert” who must rescue the ignorant white Protestant family. Clyde, a non-practicing Christian, must submit to Hasidic authority—a narrative that reinforces the exoticism of Jewish mysticism for mainstream audiences. Released in August 2012, The Possession arrived during