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Incubus (1982) After a number of women in a rural Wisconsin town are assaulted so horribly that their uteruses rupture (sorry, ladies, I'm just telling you the plot), a doctor and a pushy reporter decide the police aren't up to the task of finding the killer and look into the incidents themselves. They not only discover that their town has a history of Satanism (the original kind, not that silly Anton LaVey stuff), but that it's presently being targeted by a demonic shapeshifting sexual predator. John Cassavetes slums it in this grimy and rather mean spirited 80's flick that's not exactly a slasher, but still plays like one since it's 1982 and that's what filled seats at the time.
TIL: The existence of demons is a given in Christianity. However, the specific belief in an incubus, a male demon who seduces or assaults women in their sleep, is arguable at best. There's no explicit mention of incubi in Scripture and early theologians like Augustine were highly skeptical of the idea that demons could sexually interact with humans. By the Middle Ages, though, some Christians were warming to the idea. For the few who might still believe in incubi, old demonology manuals like Malleus Maleficarum note ways to fight an incubus include going to confession, making the sign of the Cross, and reciting a Hail Mary. However, since that pretty much applies to any demon, it really doesn't matter if it's an actual incubus or not.
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Life of Brian (1979) Though born just one manger down from Jesus, Brian Cohen is now an unassuming and insignificant nebbish growing weary of living with his domineering single mother under the oppressive Roman occupation of Judea. Through a series of increasingly ludicrous events, Brian finds himself a member of the Roman resisting People's Front of Judea (not to be confused with the Judean People's Front, those tossers), a very confused passenger aboard an alien spaceship, and a very, very reluctant false-messiah. The Monty Python boys decide to take some pot shots at what they see as the sillier side of religion and the results, while not all the way up there with their Holy Grail, are almost always absurdly funny.
TIL: While the Vatican did not officially condemn it, lots of other religious groups did come out against Life of Brian on its initial release under the assumption that it would be blasphemous. This caused Python member Michael Palin to publicly admit the group was originally going to satirize Jesus, but after reading through the Gospels for material, they couldn't find anything about Him to mock. Instead, they went after those who blindly follow religion without evidence or reason, which the Python's considered to be anybody who adhered to any kind of religious belief. If only they had done a little more research beyond the Gospels into the likes of Augustine, Aquinas, Bonaventure, etc., they might have realized they were once again working under a common atheist misassumption and were not, in fact, the smartest people in the room.