: Most reviewers agree the final act is the film's weakest point. Critics from Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews and Rotten Tomatoes describe the denouement as "fanciful," "unbelievable," and "hilariously preposterous". Community Perspectives

“This starts out vaguely intriguing... But then it turns into a lot of priestly running around... and an ending that is laughably Shocking and Very Important Indeed.” Letterboxd · 1 year ago

: Shot in widescreen monochrome, the film effectively captures a claustrophobic "village paranoia". However, Variety called it a "run-of-the-mill programmer" despite the strong cast.

: An atheist author (William Bendix) dares God to strike him dead in a small Irish village and is immediately shot by a mysterious stranger who claims amnesia. Reviewers from Letterboxd and IMDb find this setup "terrific" and "intriguing".

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: Most reviewers agree the final act is the film's weakest point. Critics from Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews and Rotten Tomatoes describe the denouement as "fanciful," "unbelievable," and "hilariously preposterous". Community Perspectives

“This starts out vaguely intriguing... But then it turns into a lot of priestly running around... and an ending that is laughably Shocking and Very Important Indeed.” Letterboxd · 1 year ago Johnny Nobody

: Shot in widescreen monochrome, the film effectively captures a claustrophobic "village paranoia". However, Variety called it a "run-of-the-mill programmer" despite the strong cast. : Most reviewers agree the final act is

: An atheist author (William Bendix) dares God to strike him dead in a small Irish village and is immediately shot by a mysterious stranger who claims amnesia. Reviewers from Letterboxd and IMDb find this setup "terrific" and "intriguing". But then it turns into a lot of priestly running around