Holy Ghost People (1967) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
A Revelation
gjampol12 February 2010
In the current political environment, religion has become a political football that's been kicked around by zealots who claim that government is anti-religion and antagonistic to God.

Although this enlightening film was made about 40 years ago, it clearly demonstrates that the freedom to worship as one pleases is as solid as the bedrock under the skyscrapers of Manhattan.

It's up to the viewer to decide whether the members of the Holiness Church in Scrabble Creek, West Virginia, are filled with the spirit of the Holy Ghost, mad or engaging in an uninhibited (and healthy)form of emotional release.

Nevertheless, the people at the service appear to be down-to-earth and brimming over with faith. The music and dancing are exuberant. They speak in tongues, handle snakes, drink poison and give testimony.

It all may seem bizarre, but their freedom to worship the way they do demonstrates that the First Amendment of our Constitution can withstand anything -- even the pronouncements of nutty politicians who want to turn the United States into an officially Christian country.

A superb film. Let freedom ring!
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Yay! Snakes! Weee!
Spuzzlightyear25 April 2013
YEARS ago on the internet archive, there were quite a number of videos (not film) set in the Appalachian mountains about religion, music and just general townspeople, but mostly it was about religion, and I found that INCREDIBLY fascinating, full of speaking in tongues, faith healing, baptisms, and other fun stuff (and a few boring things). They've disappeared (maybe because I gave some damning reviews to some of them), but they've always stuck out in my mind as some of the most unique vids ever on the archive. The Holy Ghost People is similar to these, maybe a wee bit more talky, grainy and non-structured then I would like, but there's still some stuff that got my attention. The interviews are interesting, and the actual speaking in tongues-hallelujah thing is really strangely bizarre. Would have liked to have known what happened to the preacher in the end.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Member of the Production Crew
jgzimmerman18 February 2011
I was the sound recordist for Peter Adair's film "The Holy Ghost People" and we spent one Summer and Fall filming their services each weekend. There is no question in my mind that most of the worshipers were completely genuine in their beliefs and actions. The few who weren't so sure of their faith were fairly obvious.

It was a powerful experience I will never forget it. I'm not about to become a Pentecostal Christian nor practice my belief the way they did, but I was was deeply affected by their sincerity and spirituality.

I have shot film all over the world and I have never experienced more friendliness and hospitality than we did on location in Scrabble Creek and Gauley Bridge, WVA in 1966.
18 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Insightful, exciting, educational
tedbarlow4 May 2004
This film puts the viewer inside the Holiness Church where poison-drinking, snake handling and speaking in tongues are a normal part of worship. I am an anthropologist and I use this as a teaching tool for my students when we discuss religion. I challenge them to explain what functions religion serves for these people and why they are more deviant than any other religion. it is excellent.
10 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Basically, We Get To Watch A Church Service
sddavis6329 December 2009
For some time - ever since I heard of this film and found it was highly recommended - I've been wanting to see it. As it came to an end, I found myself wondering what it was trying to achieve. Basically, we get to watch a recording of parts of a "Holiness" service in West Virginia. If you've ever been to a charismatic worship service most of this will be pretty familiar. Testimonies, speaking in tongues, dancing in the aisles, people asking for healing, people being "slain in the Spirit" and lots and lots of singing. Head to your local Pentecostal Church for an evening service. You'll see most of that. What you won't see at your typical charismatic church, of course, is snake handling. That's the hook here, but there's no snake handling until the last 15 minutes or so. The person leading the service gets bitten, but seems OK, and there's no follow-up to see if he stayed OK. Aside from being able to see the snake handling, actually attending a charismatic service is far more interesting than watching one.

Basically, I found myself with a question when this was over: what was the purpose of the film? It's described as a documentary, but it offered very little information. The opening of the film mentions that the movement bases itself on the signs recorded in Mark 16:9-20, but doesn't mention that Mark 16:9-20 is considered by most to be a later add-on to Mark's Gospel, but not part of the original text. Issues around "proof-texting" could have been mentioned here, but weren't. There's no real discussion of the "holiness" movement, no background, no critical evaluation. It's just a recording of a service. The snake handling gives it an edge, but frankly the edge is rather dull. 4/10
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Ecstasy, community, democracy, spontaneity: ethnography
ericksonbrad921 October 2010
This is a great ethnographic film that lets its subjects speak for themselves. Instead of depicting pentecostal Christians as outside "normal" Christianity, it portrays their humanity in their care for one another, their egalitarian organization, the sensory/emotional depth of their experience, and the beauty of their music, dance and testimony. My students (anthropology of religion) immediately saw connections to Durkheim (collective effervescence), Carnival (permission to break from everyday norms), the sensibilities of Burning Man (spontaneity, no spectators, self-reliance, personalization of religious/spiritual experience) Marcel Mauss (reciprocity), and Max Weber (the Protestant work ethic: "the sin of idleness"). I strongly disagree with the professed anthropologist above who characterized the subjects as "deviant." This plays into normative/dominant notions of "good" religion as emotionally controlled, non-spontaneous, and yoked to norms of middle class citizenship. Anthropologists should know that religious experience is infinitely varied and no single variation is "normal."
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Valuable Religious Documentary
pietzsche17 February 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I was lucky enough to see this film at a museum film festival, and was quite impressed with its spiritual power. It is an authentic experience of a traditional religious service in the Appalachian hills circa 1968. It is not at all extreme or exploitive. The snakes are just the climax of an otherwise worshipful service of heartfelt singing and confession. The singing is quite moving, as well as the testimonial of a woman describing her spiritual dream and how it made her feel blessed. If one has had any experience of the Holy Ghost at all, one will get a contact high from this film. There is also a lesson at the end of the film as well, regarding trying to artificially extend the experience of the Holy Ghost and the consequences of such a lapse in reverence, where the leader of the service gets bitten by a snake when they are not put back in time. Unfortunately, we do not get to see the fate of the snakebite victim, but are left to wonder whether or not he survived.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
an in-depth-look
ilovegod2480124 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I live in West Virginia and am also a Pentecostal Christian.I do not practice snake-handling or drink poison,but I really enjoyed the documentary.It shows how the snake-handling church functioned back in the 1960's.I do not agree with the practice of handling snakes but the one thing that I do admire about them is their faith and how they show it.I believe that people need to look at this film without a bias attitude towards their practices but look at it as how they are taking the Bible literally.I was really amazed that the director would even attempt to do the subject matter,but then again,it was 1967,and religion was not one of the arguable issues that it is today.I do not condone what they do but,in some way,I do not condemn what they do either.I think I heard on another documentary that about only 2,000 thousand people practice snake-handling now compared to 3,000,000 people who are Southern Baptists or Pentecostals.I recommend this documentary to people of all denominations.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Puts all the current "reality" TV to shame... a 1st rate document
Mistah Jonze6 August 2001
This little film is a first rate documentation of a snake handling worship service in southern appalachia shot in the early sixties. The filmakers journey to a small town in West Virginia and interview several of the people involved who havebeen saved. This simple film is respectfully done and the testimonies of these people alone might make a believer of you. If you can find it, rent it and be amazed by the power of the Spirit at work in these lives!
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Are you tired of only wondering about this?.....
purrboxmmauctions6 January 2007
.....then by all means let me know directly at the above e-mail address so that I may arrange for a copy for you. This gritty, startling documentary by Peter Adair brings you so unnervingly close to the actual holy-ghost consciousness that you'll almost feel as though the people in question are breathing down your neck in all their shrieking, convulsive, snake-handling glory. What a spectacle! By the time the copperheads and rattlesnakes start flying about the room, you won't believe your eyes (or ears, for that matter) if you hadn't reached that point already. 'Holy Ghost People' is guaranteed to satisfy anyone's appetite for Mondo-movie-style bizarreness.
0 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed