‘PENCHANT ENTERTAINMENT’ HEATS UP SLATE WITH PICK UP OF FILM AND TV RIGHTS TO ICONIC EXORCISM BOOK “HOSTAGE TO THE DEVIL”
Critically-acclaimed New York Times and Amazon Best Seller finds home for film and television adaptations
Penchant Entertainment has announced that they have picked up all film and TV rights to the critically-acclaimed
New York Times and Amazon bestselling book Hostage to the Devil: The Possession and Exorcism of Five Contemporary Americans by Father Malachi Martin with plans for film and series adaptation, each focusing on different elements from the source
material.
Originally published in 1976,
Hostage to the Devil has sold well over a million copies
worldwide and now, in eBook format, this chilling nonfiction account of
possession and exorcism in modern America has been embraced by a whole
new generation of readers, even inspiring a 2016 feature-length
documentary. The multiple projects based on the book will be produced
by Erin Eggers, Chase Hudson and Matthew Porter for Penchant.
In
Hostage to the Devil, Martin presents a chilling and
thoroughly-researched analysis of demonic possession and the Rite of
Exorcism, offering rich new details on the practice and its
participants, never explored on screen. Presenting exorcism as
an epic battle between priest and demon, Martin reveals how this
profoundly personal battle can span a lifetime, exacting an enormous
toll on the priest, who sacrifices a piece of his humanity each time he
confronts these demonic forces.
Malachi
Martin, a former Jesuit priest, professor and theologian-turned-author
of 15 novels and nonfiction books, was an acknowledged expert on and
frequent critic of
the Catholic Church. After moving to New York in 1965, Martin began to
focus extensively on demonic Possession and assisted in nearly a dozen
Exorcisms before beginning his work on
Hostage to the Devil.
Although
frequently referred to as the inspiration for William Blatty’s famed
novel, THE EXORCIST, Malachi Martin was a harsh critic of the book and
the resulting film,
believing both to be grossly inaccurate and potentially dangerous.
Professional feuds aside, Martin feared the eroding effects of reducing
demonic Possession into simple entertainment, and wrote
Hostage to the Devil “as a clear warning that Possession is
not—nor was it ever—some tale of dark fancy featuring ogres and happy
endings. Possession is real; and real prices are paid.”
“Since its publication,
Hostage to the Devil has been the canonical book on
possession and exorcism and we are thrilled to finally be able to bring
it to life,” said Penchant co-founders. “With such vibrant,
character-rich material at our disposal, our goal is to shatter
genre expectations and reset the bar for elevated supernatural fare.”
Feature
film and television executives and producers Eggers, Hudson and Porter
launched Penchant earlier this year to create sophisticated, commercial
entertainment for
audiences worldwide.
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