Just don’t expect to feel clean afterward.
Set in 17th-century Loudun, France, the film stars Oliver Reed as Father Urbain Grandier, a charismatic and sexually active priest who runs afoul of Cardinal Richelieu. When a convent of sexually repressed Ursuline nuns, led by the hysterical Sister Jeanne (Vanessa Redgrave, in a staggering performance), accuses Grandier of witchcraft, the state uses the ensuing hysteria to destroy him. Grandier is tortured, tried, and burned at the stake. the devils 1971 internet archive
Today, any curious viewer with an internet connection can watch Sister Jeanne writhe in convulsive ecstasy, hear Father Grandier’s bones crack on the rack, and witness the nuns defile a crucifix—all in 111 unbroken, uncensored minutes. Ken Russell is gone. The film’s negative is rotting. But the digital version—messy, illegal, and miraculous—lives on. Just don’t expect to feel clean afterward
Yet, in the 21st century, a digital phoenix has risen from the ashes of this celluloid bonfire. The unlikely savior? The . This article explores the turbulent history of The Devils , why it remains terrifyingly relevant, and how the Internet Archive has become the primary digital sanctuary for Russell’s "unfilmable" vision. The Inferno of Censorship: A Brief History To understand why the Internet Archive’s copy is so vital, one must first understand the war waged against The Devils . Grandier is tortured, tried, and burned at the stake
Until that day—if it ever comes—the remains the de facto distribution network for Ken Russell’s masterpiece. It is a fitting irony: a film about a man destroyed by corrupt, powerful institutions is preserved by the most anarchic, democratic, and institution-free corner of the web. Conclusion: A Digital Miracle The Devils is not an easy watch. It is a fever dream of flagellation, ecstasy, and screaming faith. It asks uncomfortable questions: Is sanctity possible without sexuality? Is mass hysteria a form of political rebellion? Is God merely a justification for cruelty?
In the annals of cinema history, few films have endured a purgatory as prolonged and unjust as Ken Russell’s 1971 masterpiece, The Devils . Based on Aldous Huxley’s non-fiction book The Devils of Loudun , the film is a blistering, hallucinatory assault on religious hypocrisy, political corruption, and mass hysteria. For over five decades, it has been treated like a contagion—censored, banned, buried, and chopped into pieces by its own distributor, Warner Bros.
For decades, Warner Bros. answered those questions by locking the film in a vault. The Internet Archive answered by picking the lock.