![]() And that Jeffs remains in power, despite his prison sentence, is chilling indeed.Guest Column: What 'The Real L Word' Did for LGBTQ Representation and Why More Needs to Be Done His drawling somnolent voice hovers over the movie like a menacing ghost, ominously intoning prophecies such as “All of you are not going to survive.” Though there are few actual video recordings of Jeffs-the most defined observe him sitting behind bars during a deposition or standing in his jail cell-these rare glimpses only add to his eerie mystique. Prophet’s Prey is more effective at presenting the enigmatic figure of the Prophet himself. But Berg offers no court transcripts or other information about other testimony that may have come forth during the trial. During the court case, the film unveils the unsettling few seconds of tape recording-which is both tame and yet utterly atrocious-of Jeffs with a 12-year-old-girl. ![]() Late in the film, we go back to the compound and hear further stories of families being broken apart and girls being removed from their parents.įor a film called “Prophet’s Prey,” however, the documentary remains surprisingly vague about the extent of Jeffs’ abuses. Again, through Krakauer and Brower, the documentary chronicles the effort to catch the fugitive prophet, and then, after he is finally captured, the subsequent court case. This presents several awkward moments, as Krakauer and Brower offer conjecture or second-hand accounts, with Berg left to fill in the details with news reports.Īfter establishing Jeffs’s queasy God-complex, the strictures of the FLDS and finally an FBI investigation into his actions, the film shifts gears when Jeffs goes underground. But the documentary always feels removed from its core subjects. As Krakauer and Brower recount their dual investigations into Jeffs and the FLDS, there is a lot of talk about the community and the struggles of those within it, but Berg has limited access to its actual members.Īdmittedly, there are a small handful: one brave Jeffs son comes forward to talk about the abuse a young wife also testifies about her experience trying to break free and one of Jeffs’s brothers and one of his sisters also speak out. Lead by a man named Warren Jeffs, the film recounts how Jeffs rose to power, increased tighter controls on the community through indoctrination and intimidation, took on dozens of wives-approximately 90, at last count-and in the process, also sexually abused an undetermined number of the sect’s children.īerg chooses to tell the story largely through the voices of two outsiders: author Jon Krakauer (who wrote the LDS nonfiction book Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith) and private investigator Sam Brower (whose 2011 book shares the film’s name). Separated from the official LDS Church in order to preserve the practice of polygamy, the fundamentalist group settled in a remote area of Utah. In the beginning, employing a Voice of God narrator and hand-drawn animation that seems out of place from the rest of the documentary, Prophet’s Prey briefly explains the history of the FLDS as a fringe offshoot of the Mormons. broadcast by Showtime, the documentary could also see some foreign TV play, given its depiction of yet another creepy American religious cult. His drawling somnolent voice hovers over the movie like a menacing ghost, ominously intoning prophecies such as “All of you are not going to survive.”Īs a piece of filmmaking, however, the documentary is as drab as the prairie dresses worn by FLDS’s female members. ![]() ![]() Whether the sleepy, droning voice of Warren Jeffs, the megalomaniacal leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints (FLDS), or the short audio recording that provided undeniable proof of his sexual abuse of adolescent girls, the best moments in the new documentary from Oscar-nominated director Amy Berg ( Deliver Us From Evil) are entirely audio-based. In the age of Serial, This American Life and the rise of podcasts, the story of Prophet’s Prey would have made for a great radio series. ![]()
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