‘Rebel Nun’ Review: Sister Helen Prejean, the Activist Who Inspired ‘Dead Man Walking,’ Gets a Lackluster Doc Portrait (2024)

Sister Helen Prejean is best known as the inspiration for the film Dead Man Walking, based on her 1993 book, with Sean Penn as a man facing the death sentence and Susan Sarandon as Sister Helen. But her story goes well beyond that. In the decades since, she has continued her campaign to save men from execution, without success, and to offer them comfort, guilty as they may be and however much she is horrified by their crimes. It’s a life’s work she continues to do at age 85. “I’ve watched six men die on death row and I’m about to watch my seventh,” she says in Rebel Nun. Yet, “I wake up each morning filled with hope.”

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That story deserves a great documentary. This well-meaning film is far from that. Rebel Nun is pedestrian at its best and cringe-worthy at its faux-arty worst. Sister Helen’s narrative is interrupted by clichéd filmmaking that includes flat-footed imagistic montages and far too many tracking shots down narrow prison hallways toward an execution chamber. Sister Helen herself is a powerful but soothing presence, and fortunately much of the running time is given over to her first-person account, straightforward and down-to-earth. Her strong character doesn’t get lost, but to see it you have to get past the director Dominic Sivyer’s (the Netflix series The Masked Scammer) stock choices.

Rebel Nun

The Bottom LineA missed opportunity.

Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Spotlight Documentary)
Director: Dominic Sivyer
Writers: Dominic Sivyer, Kari Lia
1 hour 40 minutes

Sister Helen’s narrative goes back to her middle-class Catholic childhood in Louisiana in the 1950s, seen in family photos, and her decision to become a nun. In the early 1980s, working in disadvantaged communities, she was asked to volunteer as a pen pal for prisoners, and eventually went to meet Patrick Sonnier, a murderer and rapist. She recalls that when she first entered the ominous gates of Angola State Prison, she thought, “I’m not in nunville anymore. Bride of Christ? Let that go.” You can see why people relate to her. She was at Sonnier’s execution but closed her eyes as he died. On the drive home she vomited but later decided she’d be a witness and never shut her eyes at an execution again. Her memory and descriptions are vivid and create a portrait of how she came to be the person she is, visiting killers and puttering around her house feeding pet birds.

But then there are those montages. The first, when we’re introduced to Sister Helen’s work, includes a smash-up of religious music and statues, bolts of electrical currents (as if we wouldn’t get it — electrocution!), wilting flowers and an old-fashioned clock. Later, she talks about how the Catholic Church’s reforms in the 1960s changed the dynamic of her social service. Able to wear ordinary clothes instead of a nun’s habit made it easier to connect with people. That good point is almost overshadowed by a 60s montage: flower children and a rocket being launched into space backed by the song “The Age of Aquarius.” Maybe these images were meant to jazz up the narrative or add a visceral connection, but they land as hokey and laughable.

Sarandon is in a bland scene, visiting Sister Helen today. Kim Kardashian is seen Face-Timing with her, as Sister Helen enlists her help spreading the word on social media about Richard Glossip, currently on death row. The celebrity scenes add little except a bit of glamour and a sense of Sister Helen’s determination.

The documentary is up to the minute taking us through to Glossip’s case. He was convicted on shaky evidence, not of committing a murder but of ordering it. Even a conservative legislator in Oklahoma, where the killing occurred, says he believes the case was mishandled. The Supreme Court has temporarily blocked the execution, and Glossip is waiting for a ruling on whether he will get a new trial. He would be the first convict Sister Helen actually saved from a death sentence.

In a section more revealing than most, we see archival video of Sister Helen meeting the parents of Faith Hawkins, murdered by Robert Lee Willie (one of two men Penn’s movie character was based on). They are furious at her. And in a new interview for the film, Hawkins’ sister resists the idea that people suffer when they are electrocuted. “Unlike their victims, they feel nothing,” she says. Depicting this tension doesn’t both-sides the issue — the film is consistently on Sister Helen’s side — but it demonstrates the complexity of the subject, and that advocates against capital punishment aren’t dismissing the anguish of the victims’ families. “No matter how much pain and grief [the families] suffer, no human being deserves to be executed,” Sister Helen says. If only Sivyer had created the film this thoughtful activist deserves.

‘Rebel Nun’ Review: Sister Helen Prejean, the Activist Who Inspired ‘Dead Man Walking,’ Gets a Lackluster Doc Portrait (2024)

FAQs

What did Sister Helen Prejean believe in? ›

The experience changed her mission as a nun. Because of Sonnier, she became a champion of the movement to abolish the death penalty. “I saw the suffering and I let myself feel it… I saw the injustice and was compelled to do something about it.

What does poncelet finally confess to Helen Why is this an important moment in the film? ›

Just before he is taken from his cell, Poncelet tearfully admits to Sister Helen that he had killed the boy and sexually assaulted the girl, before Vitello killed her. Helen tells Poncelet that the truth has set him free.

What religious order does Sister Helen belong to? ›

Prejean became a member of the Roman Catholic religious order the Sisters of St. Joseph of Medaille (now part of the Congregation of St. Joseph) in 1957.

What does Helen Prejean fight for? ›

Helen Prejean CSJ (/preɪˈʒɑːn/ pray-ZHAHN; born April 21, 1939) is a Catholic religious sister and a leading American advocate for the abolition of the death penalty. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.

What crime was Dead Man Walking based on? ›

Dead Man Walking is a film based on the true story of a nun who is introduced to a man sentenced to death for murder. She visits him in prison and advocates for him to have his sentence reduced. Although they only know each other for a brief time, the relationship formed between the two is impactful.

What was the point with the Dead Man Walking movie? ›

Touching such universal themes as revenge and redemption, crime and punishment, and fear and salvation, the movie explores the relationship between Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn), a convicted rapist/murderer on death row, and his spiritual advisor, Sister Helen Prejean (Susan Sarandon).

What happens at the end of Dead Man Walking? ›

As he is prepared for execution, he appeals to the boy's father for forgiveness and tells the girl's parents that he hopes his death brings them peace. Poncelet is executed by lethal injection and given a proper burial.

What did Nannie Helen Burroughs believe in? ›

Burroughs believed women should have the opportunity to receive an education and job training. She wrote about the need for Black and white women to work together to achieve the right to vote. She believed suffrage for African American women was crucial to protect their interests in an often discriminatory society.

What does Helen believe caused her sister's death? ›

In "The Adventure of the Speckled Band," Helen initially believes her sister Julia's death was caused by fright from mysterious circ*mstances. However, the true cause is revealed to be a venomous snake, used by their stepfather, Dr. Roylott, to murder Julia in an attempt to maintain control over his late wife's estate.

What impact have Sister Helen's actions had on society? ›

Sister Helen Prejean is known around the world for her tireless work to end the death penalty. Sister Helen has been instrumental in sparking national dialogue on capital punishment and in shaping the Catholic Church's vigorous opposition to allexecutions.

What happens in the poem Sister Helen? ›

Compositional study was known for this subject based on Dante Gabriel Rossetti's poem Sister Helen first published in 1854, in which a betrayed woman melts the image of her faithless lover (and thus forfeits her soul by employing witchcraft) while her young brother watches the mans death from the battlements.

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