The Sacrament

Live as one. Die as one.

6.0
20141h 39m

Two journalists set out to document their friend's journey to reunite with his estranged sister. They track her to an undisclosed location where they are welcomed into the remote world of "Eden Parish," a self-sustained rural utopia composed of nearly two hundred members and overseen by a mysterious leader known only as "Father." It quickly becomes evident to the newcomers that this paradise may not be as it seems. Eden Parish harbors a twisted secret. What started as just another documentary shoot soon becomes a fight for survival.

Production

Logo for Worldview Entertainment

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy
Logo for Hoopla
Logo for Plex Channel

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Blu-ray Trailer

Blu-ray Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Clip - Interview

Clip - Interview

Thumbnail for video: Spot

Spot

Thumbnail for video: Clip - Creepy Father

Clip - Creepy Father

Thumbnail for video: Featurette

Featurette

Thumbnail for video: Clip - Take It

Clip - Take It

Cast

Photo of AJ Bowen

AJ Bowen

Sam Turner

Photo of Kentucker Audley

Kentucker Audley

Patrick Carter

Photo of Amy Seimetz

Amy Seimetz

Caroline

Photo of Conphidance

Conphidance

Guide #1

Photo of Kate Lyn Sheil

Kate Lyn Sheil

Sarah White

Photo of Donna Biscoe

Donna Biscoe

Wendy JOHNSON

Photo of Shawn Parsons

Shawn Parsons

Carpenter

Photo of Kris Rey

Kris Rey

Mother of Gene

Photo of Nick Damici

Nick Damici

Loyalist

Photo of Helen Rogers

Helen Rogers

Loyalist

More Like This

Reviews

T

tmdb47633491

5/10

Generous 3.0 here. I really like Ti West. House of the Devil was awesome, and Innkeepers is one of my favorite horror movies from the past few years. Knowing about the Jonestown massacre makes this one extra-creepy, and the short running time works in its favor. Gene Jones slays. Too many missteps though. The Vice angle is the only excuse I can think of for using music (they score/soundtrack their docu-shorts, I'm pretty sure) and it makes the found-footage thing way too plastic. Maybe it's just me but I can't stand pretty much any kind of "Be careful out there boys: you wouldn't wanna walk into the wrong place..." horror trope dialogue. Most everything here is coming from a good place; you can tell Ti West really cares about what he does (tho never moreso than with Innkeepers), but this probably needed more time to simmer/bubble around in his head. Can't help but notice it's his first movie produced by Eli Roth. I have this vision of them meeting a few months before production, getting drunk in Eli's apartment and coming up with the idea. Still better than most horror movies churned out

You've reached the end.