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Film

Film review: The Vigil

This Chasidic chiller is the first horror film to be made in Yiddish

July 31, 2020 14:06
Dave Davis in The Vigil
2 min read

With a long list of successful releases under their belt, horror outfit Blumhouse Productions appear to have cornered the market for fast and effective spine-chillers. Their latest release, however, is a horror film with a difference. Dubbed the first mainstream horror film in Yiddish, The Vigil marks an interesting departure for executive producer Jason Blum, the man behind titles such as Insidious, The Purge and the award winning post-race horror Get Out.

Written and directed by novelist turned filmmaker Keith Thomas, The Vigil stars Dave Davis (The Walking Dead) and Charedi actor Menashe Lustig, who starred in the 2017 semi-autobiographical Yiddish feature film Menashe.

We meet Yakov Ronen (Davis), a formerly observant young Chasid, as he takes part in a weekly support group for those who have left their close-knit Orthodox communities in Brooklyn. Yakov is still unsure about how to navigate his new life in an unfamiliar secular society. Struggling with guilt over the death of his younger brother, he can’t help but feel out of place, even when fellow group member Sarah (Malky Goldman, Unorthodox) takes an interest in him.

That same night, Yakov is approached by his persistent former rabbi Reb Shulem (Lustig) who offers to pay him to watch over the body of the recently deceased Mr Litvak (Ronald Cohen). As he is strapped for cash, he accepts, but refuses to be drawn into a discussion on religion . At the Litvaks’ house, the young man soon realises the dead man and his frail old widow (Lynn Cohen) have both been haunted by a dybbuk, a malevolent presence which feeds on painful memories and which has now attached itself to him.