Holy Ghost People (1967 Film)
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''Holy Ghost People'' is a 1967 documentary directed and narrated by Peter Adair. It is about the service of a Pentecostal community in
Scrabble Creek ''Scrabble'' is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles, each bearing a single letter, onto a game board divided into a 15×15 grid of squares. The tiles must form words that, in crossword fashion, read left ...
, West Virginia, United States. The church service includes faith healing,
snake handling Snake handling may refer to: * Snake handler, a person who professionally handles snakes *Snake handling in Christianity Snake handling, also called serpent handling, is a religious rite observed in a small number of isolated churches, mostly ...
, speaking in tongues and singing. This documentary has entered the public domain and is available at the Internet Archive.


Summary

The documentary begins by showing the audience various images of the church and its night services. After the opening credits, a narrator introduces the Pentecostal community in Scrabble Creek, West Virginia. The narrator presents various activities the church partakes in, such as
snake handling Snake handling may refer to: * Snake handler, a person who professionally handles snakes *Snake handling in Christianity Snake handling, also called serpent handling, is a religious rite observed in a small number of isolated churches, mostly ...
, speaking in tongues, and four to six hour long meetings at the church multiple times a week. The narrators explain that while people are often bitten while handling the snakes, mainly copperheads, they refuse medical help. The documentary then features several one-on-one interviews from various members of the church. These interviews reveal stories of how many of the church's members found salvation through the Holy Ghost and how the Holy Ghost saves them in their daily lives. Some members reveal stories of how they are able to speak in tongues; others reveal how they communicate with God, who sometimes paralyzes them. The final interview is of an old woman who shakes and sometimes convulses on camera while going in and out of speaking in tongues. The film then cuts to the beginning of a church service. As men enter the church, they go up and kiss each other on the lips before they are seated. After everyone is seated, people start clapping and singing together. Then there is a cut to the pastor talking to the congregation. He invites those who have not found the Holy Ghost to find out. He also tells the congregation to ignore the cameraman and to act as though it was just another normal night. The pastor continues his sermon, and the documentary uses various cuts to show that a long period of time has passed. Eventually, the church service moves into a time of prayer. The people stand and announce their prayer concerns to the congregation. The pastor tells people that God will answer their prayers if they only believe. They then bring a woman, who is rapidly losing her eyesight, to the front of the church to pray for. The camera pans to the rest of the church and shows that everyone else has formed into small groups and are all praying at the same time. The different styles of prayer include standing still, lying on the floor, and convulsing seemingly uncontrollably. The end of the film contains a lot of fast cuts in order to show everything that happened in the service. A new man preaches, followed by two people who lead the congregation in worship. After clapping and singing, snakes are brought out to the snake handlers. As the music and clapping continue, people begin to get up and dance. Various people throughout the church handle several snakes, and a man who dances violently quickly collapses to the ground and lies there. No one rushes to help him. The music stops so that people can provide testimonies and the church can take an offering. The pastor handles a snake as he tries to get people to give money to the church. The snake bites the pastor on the hand. The film ends with a shot of the pastor's swollen hand.


Cast

* Peter Adair, Narrator * Elza O. Preast, Self, Reverend


Reception

Gary Morris of ''
Bright Lights Film Journal ''Bright Lights Film Journal'' is an online popular-academic film magazine, based in Oakland, California, United States. It is edited and published by Gary Morris. Originally a print publication established in 1974, it was discontinued in 1980 to ...
'' quoted Margaret Mead as having called it "one of the best ethnographic films ever made".


Legacy

It was a partial inspiration for the 2013 film '' Holy Ghost People'', and some of its footage was used. It is also used in anthropology and documentary film classes.


See also

* List of films in the public domain in the United States


References


External links

* {{IMDb title, 0270992, Holy Ghost People
Watch on the Internet Archive
1967 films 1967 documentary films American documentary films Black-and-white documentary films Documentary films about Appalachia Documentary films about Christianity in the United States Pentecostalism in the United States Films shot in West Virginia Christianity in Appalachia Religion in West Virginia American black-and-white films 1960s English-language films 1960s American films English-language documentary films