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Priest (2011 film)

Priest is a 2011 American action horror film directed by Scott Stewart and stars Paul Bettany as the title character.[2][3] It is loosely based on the Korean comic of the same name by Hyung Min-woo. In an alternate universe, humanity and vampires have warred for centuries. After the last Vampire War, a veteran Warrior Priest lives in obscurity until his niece (Lily Collins) is kidnapped by vampires.

Priest
Theatrical release poster
Directed byScott Stewart
Written byCory Goodman
Based onPriest
by Min-Woo Hyung
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyDon Burgess
Edited byLisa Zeno Churgin
Music byChristopher Young
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • May 13, 2011 (2011-05-13)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$60 million
Box office$78.3 million[1]

The film was released on May 13, 2011. The film earned over $78 million at the box office against a $60 million production budget, but it was panned by critics, who praised the film's visual style and art direction while criticizing the movie's use of genre clichés, writing, acting, editing and action scenes.

Plot

A centuries-long war between humans and vampires has devastated the planet's surface and led to a theocracy under an organization called The Church. Despite the vampires' vulnerability to sunlight, and all of mankind's technological advances, the vampires' greater strength and speed made them impossible to defeat until humanity sheltered them in giant walled cities and trained a group of elite warriors, the Priests, which turned the tide.

In the opening scene, a group of Priests enters the Sola Mira Hive but are ambushed by the vampires. As they attempt to retreat, one of their numbers is seized from behind, and their leader tries to pull him to safety, but is forced to let go and watch him dragged, screaming, back into the hive.

Years later, the majority of the vampires have been killed, while the remainder were placed in reservations. With the war over, the Clergy disbanded the Priests. Outside the walled cities, some humans seek out a living, free from the totalitarian control of The Church.

Priest (Paul Bettany) is approached by Hicks (Cam Gigandet), the sheriff of a free town, Augustine. Priest learns that his brother, Owen, and Owen's wife, Shannon—Priest's girlfriend before he was recruited by the clergy—were mortally wounded in a vampire attack, and Priest's niece, Lucy (Lily Collins), was kidnapped. Hicks asks for Priest's help in rescuing Lucy. Priest asks the Church to reinstate his authority, but leader Monsignor Orelas (Christopher Plummer) does not believe the vampire story and refuses, insisting on maintaining the common belief that the vampires have been completely defeated, for fear of compromising the Church's authority. Priest defiantly leaves the city and Orelas sends three Priests and a Priestess (Maggie Q) to bring him back.

Priest and Hicks arrive at Nightshade Reservation where humans called Familiars, people infected with a pathogen that makes them subservient to the vampires, live alongside a number of the surviving vampires. After a fierce battle, the pair discovers that most of the vampires have taken shelter in Sola Mira, which was thought to have been abandoned after the war. Priestess, one of Priest's team during the failed attack on the Hive, joins them at Sola Mira. The trio destroys a Hive Guardian vampire, then discover that the vampires have bred a new army and dug a tunnel out of the mountain towards a town called Jericho. The other three Priests have arrived at Jericho just as night falls and an armored train arrives, unleashing hundreds of vampires upon the population. The vampires are led by a powerful and mysterious human wearing a black hat (Karl Urban). When the three Priests reject Black Hat's offer to join him, he kills them all.

The next morning, Priest, Priestess and Hicks arrive in Jericho and discover the town empty and the three dead Priests crucified. Priest and Priestess share an intimate moment when she confesses her feelings for him, hoping that now that Shannon has died, he would no longer feel bound to her. Priest gently refuses. Priest realizes that the vampires have been using the trains to travel by day and attack the free towns by night, with the walled cities at the end of the train line. Hicks believes the cities are likewise protected by the sun, but Priest explains that the cities' massive clouds of smoke and ash have permanently deprived them of sunlight. If the train reaches one of the cities, the attack will be a slaughter.

Hicks, who is in love with Lucy, threatens Priest, believing that Priest intends to kill her if she has been infected by the vampires. Priestess explains that he cannot do so, because Lucy is actually Priest's daughter, and that Owen stepped in as a husband and a father when Priest was taken by the Church. Lucy was never told the truth about her parentage.

While Priestess rushes ahead to plant a bomb on the railroad tracks, Priest and Hicks board the train to rescue Lucy. Battling vampires and Familiars, the two are finally overpowered by Black Hat just as they find Lucy. Black Hat is revealed as the priest who was lost in the attack on Sola Mira. After being captured, the vampire Queen gave him her blood, turning him into the first Vampire-Human hybrid who can survive the sun. As Priest fights Black Hat, Lucy discovers the truth about her parentage. On the tracks ahead of the train, Priestess battles several Familiars, but one of them destroys the detonator for the explosives. Instead, she mounts the explosives on her motor bike and drives it into the train engine. The explosion and subsequent derailment kills the vampires and engulfs Black Hat in flames, while Hicks, Priest, Priestess, and Lucy are able to escape.

Priest returns to the city and confronts Monsignor Orelas during Mass, telling him of the burnt train containing the vampires' bodies, but not the Queen's. He proves this by throwing a vampire head onto the floor and shocking everyone in the room. Orelas still refuses to believe him, declaring that the war is over, while Priest says that it is just beginning. Outside the city Priest meets Priestess, who confirms that other Priests have been notified and will meet them at a rendezvous point. Priest sets off into the sunset.

Cast

Production

The priests of our story are like Jedi knights. They have these supernatural abilities to fight vampires and they saved humanity before the movie even begins. Now, a generation later, society has moved on from war, and the priests are like pariahs. They're almost like Vietnam vets—they've been cast aside by society and they're now reviled and feared.

— Director Scott Stewart[3]

Priest is directed by Scott Stewart and written by Cory Goodman. The film is based on the supernatural horror and action Korean comics Priest by Min-Woo Hyung.

The project was first announced in March 2005 when the studio Screen Gems bought Goodman's spec script.[4] In January 2006, Andrew Douglas, who directed The Amityville Horror, was attached to direct Priest.[5] In June 2006, actor Gerard Butler entered negotiations to star as the title character, and filming was scheduled to start in Mexico on October 1, 2006.[6] Filming did not proceed and, by three years later, director Douglas had been replaced by Stewart,[7] while Butler had been replaced in the starring role by Paul Bettany.[8] Stewart and Bettany had previously worked together in the Screen Gems film Legion.

With a budget of $60 million,[9] filming began in August 2009 in Los Angeles, California,[10] and it concluded in November 2009.[11] The film was the most expensive production from Screen Gems, to that date,[9] and as of 2018 is still tied for third-most expensive, behind only Underworld: Awakening and Resident Evil: Retribution.

Tokyopop flew Min-Woo Hyung to where production was taking place so the comics' creator could visit the art department and discuss the film with Stewart. The film diverges from the comics in following a different timeline of events and adding elements of the sci-fi western, cyberpunk and post-apocalyptic science-fiction genres.[2][12] The director described Priest's vampires as not being human in origin, and humans bitten by vampires became familiars instead.[13] There are different forms of vampires, such as hive drones, guardians, and a queen. Since the vampires were intended to move quickly, they were fully computer-generated for the film. While vampires are harmed by sunlight in most lore, the film's vampires are instead photosensitive, being albino cave-dwellers. Stewart said, "They are the enemy we don't really understand, but we fought them for centuries. They are mysterious and alien, with their own culture. You sense that they think and communicate, but you don't really understand what they are saying." The director also called Priest an homage to The Searchers with the title character being similar to John Wayne's character and the vampires being similar to the Comanche.[14] The animated prologue for the film was created by American animator and director Genndy Tartakovsky.[15] The production team includes:[16]

Theatrical release

Priest was released in the United States and Canada on May 13, 2011.[1] The film's release date changed numerous times in 2010 and 2011.[17] It was originally scheduled for October 1, 2010,[11] but it moved earlier to August 27, 2010, to fill a weekend slot when another Screen Gems film, Resident Evil: Afterlife, was postponed.[18] When the filmmakers wanted to convert Priest from 2D to 3D, the film was newly scheduled for release on January 14, 2011.[19] It was delayed again to May 13, 2011, so the film could attract summertime audiences.[20]

Priest was released outside the United States and Canada on May 6, 2011, in four markets. It grossed an estimated $5.6 million over the weekend, with "decent debuts" of $2.9 million in Russia and $1.8 million in Spain. It performed poorly in the United Kingdom with under $700,000.[21]

The film was released in the United States and Canada on May 13, 2011, in 2,864 theaters with 2,006 having 3D screenings.[22] It grossed an estimated $14.5 million over the weekend, ranking fourth at the box office. Its performance was considered subpar compared to similar films in the Underworld series and Resident Evil series.[23] To date, Priest has grossed an estimated $76.5 million, of which $29.1 million was from North America.[1]

Critical reception

Priest was largely panned by critics. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 15% based on reviews from 101 critics and reports a rating average of 4.00 out of 10 with a consensus that "Priest is admittedly sleek and stylish, but those qualities are wasted on a dull, derivative blend of sci-fi, action, and horror clichés".[24] At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 41 based on 13 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[25] CinemaScore polls reported that the average grade audiences gave the film was a "C+" on an A+ to F scale.[citation needed]

See also

  • Legion, a film also directed by Scott Stewart and starring Paul Bettany.
  • Vampire films, about vampires in cinema and other films featuring vampires.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Priest (2011)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Solis, Jorge (Apr 22, 2011). . FANGORIA. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved Oct 12, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Marshall, Rick (August 24, 2010). "Why Post-Apocalyptic 'Priest' Won't Be Your Regular Vampire Story". MTV. from the original on September 27, 2010.
  4. ^ Laporte, Nicole (March 7, 2005). "Screen Gems stakes claim to 'Priest' pic". Variety. from the original on November 9, 2012.
  5. ^ . Variety. January 24, 2006. Archived from the original on November 9, 2012.
  6. ^ Laporte, Nicole (June 25, 2006). "Screen Gems collars 'Priest'". Variety. from the original on November 9, 2012.
  7. ^ "'Psy-Ops' mission for 'Legion' director Scott Stewart". The Hollywood Reporter. October 14, 2009. from the original on July 8, 2011.
  8. ^ Kit, Borys (March 31, 2009). "Paul Bettany to battle vampires in 'Priest'". Reuters. from the original on March 5, 2014.
  9. ^ a b Kaufman, Amy (May 12, 2011). "Movie Projector: 'Priest' to flop, 'Bridesmaids' looks decent, but 'Thor' will pound both". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  10. ^ . Empire. August 24, 2009. Archived from the original on October 21, 2012.
  11. ^ a b "Priest Wraps Production in L.A." ShockTillYouDrop.com. November 23, 2009. from the original on October 13, 2012.
  12. ^ Gingold, Michael (May 13, 2011). . FANGORIA. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved Oct 12, 2011.
  13. ^ Warmoth, Brian (January 28, 2010). "'Priest' Director Reveals His Vampires' Origins And Creator Min-Woo Hyung's Role In The Film". MTV. from the original on July 29, 2010.
  14. ^ Wax, Alyse (January 22, 2010). . FEARnet. Archived from the original on August 14, 2010.
  15. ^ Goellner, Caleb (March 7, 2011). "Genndy Tartakovsky's Animated 'Priest' Prologue Now Viewable on Mobile Phones". MTV.
  16. ^ "Priest (2011)". IMDB. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  17. ^ Subers, Ray (April 23, 2010). "'Green Hornet' Adds 3D, Moves to 2011". Box Office Mojo. from the original on August 23, 2010.
  18. ^ Vejvoda, Jim (December 10, 2009). "Priest Takes RE4's Place". IGN. from the original on April 14, 2010.
  19. ^ Goellner, Caleb (February 5, 2010). "'Priest' Gets 3D Treatment, New Release Date". MTV. from the original on July 28, 2010.
  20. ^ Marnell, Blair (June 17, 2010). "'Priest' Pushed Back To Summer 2011". MTV. from the original on July 29, 2010.
  21. ^ Subers, Ray (May 10, 2011). "Around-the-World Roundup: 'Fast Five' Vanquishes 'Thor'". Box Office Mojo.
  22. ^ Stewart, Andrew (May 13, 2011). "'Bridesmaids,' 'Priest' face tentpoles at B.O." Variety.
  23. ^ Subers, Ray (May 15, 2011). "Weekend Report: 'Thor' Holds on to Throne, 'Bridesmaids' a Strong Second". Box Office Mojo.
  24. ^ "Priest Movie Reviews". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  25. ^ "Priest Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved May 25, 2011.

External links

priest, 2011, film, confused, with, priest, 1994, film, priest, 2011, american, action, horror, film, directed, scott, stewart, stars, paul, bettany, title, character, loosely, based, korean, comic, same, name, hyung, alternate, universe, humanity, vampires, h. Not to be confused with Priest 1994 film Priest is a 2011 American action horror film directed by Scott Stewart and stars Paul Bettany as the title character 2 3 It is loosely based on the Korean comic of the same name by Hyung Min woo In an alternate universe humanity and vampires have warred for centuries After the last Vampire War a veteran Warrior Priest lives in obscurity until his niece Lily Collins is kidnapped by vampires PriestTheatrical release posterDirected byScott StewartWritten byCory GoodmanBased onPriestby Min Woo HyungProduced byMichael DeLuca Joshua Donen Mitchell PeckStarringPaul Bettany Karl Urban Cam Gigandet Maggie Q Lily Collins Stephen Moyer Christopher PlummerCinematographyDon BurgessEdited byLisa Zeno ChurginMusic byChristopher YoungProductioncompaniesScreen Gems Tokyopop DMG EntertainmentDistributed bySony Pictures ReleasingRelease dateMay 13 2011 2011 05 13 Running time87 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 60 millionBox office 78 3 million 1 The film was released on May 13 2011 The film earned over 78 million at the box office against a 60 million production budget but it was panned by critics who praised the film s visual style and art direction while criticizing the movie s use of genre cliches writing acting editing and action scenes Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Theatrical release 5 Critical reception 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditA centuries long war between humans and vampires has devastated the planet s surface and led to a theocracy under an organization called The Church Despite the vampires vulnerability to sunlight and all of mankind s technological advances the vampires greater strength and speed made them impossible to defeat until humanity sheltered them in giant walled cities and trained a group of elite warriors the Priests which turned the tide In the opening scene a group of Priests enters the Sola Mira Hive but are ambushed by the vampires As they attempt to retreat one of their numbers is seized from behind and their leader tries to pull him to safety but is forced to let go and watch him dragged screaming back into the hive Years later the majority of the vampires have been killed while the remainder were placed in reservations With the war over the Clergy disbanded the Priests Outside the walled cities some humans seek out a living free from the totalitarian control of The Church Priest Paul Bettany is approached by Hicks Cam Gigandet the sheriff of a free town Augustine Priest learns that his brother Owen and Owen s wife Shannon Priest s girlfriend before he was recruited by the clergy were mortally wounded in a vampire attack and Priest s niece Lucy Lily Collins was kidnapped Hicks asks for Priest s help in rescuing Lucy Priest asks the Church to reinstate his authority but leader Monsignor Orelas Christopher Plummer does not believe the vampire story and refuses insisting on maintaining the common belief that the vampires have been completely defeated for fear of compromising the Church s authority Priest defiantly leaves the city and Orelas sends three Priests and a Priestess Maggie Q to bring him back Priest and Hicks arrive at Nightshade Reservation where humans called Familiars people infected with a pathogen that makes them subservient to the vampires live alongside a number of the surviving vampires After a fierce battle the pair discovers that most of the vampires have taken shelter in Sola Mira which was thought to have been abandoned after the war Priestess one of Priest s team during the failed attack on the Hive joins them at Sola Mira The trio destroys a Hive Guardian vampire then discover that the vampires have bred a new army and dug a tunnel out of the mountain towards a town called Jericho The other three Priests have arrived at Jericho just as night falls and an armored train arrives unleashing hundreds of vampires upon the population The vampires are led by a powerful and mysterious human wearing a black hat Karl Urban When the three Priests reject Black Hat s offer to join him he kills them all The next morning Priest Priestess and Hicks arrive in Jericho and discover the town empty and the three dead Priests crucified Priest and Priestess share an intimate moment when she confesses her feelings for him hoping that now that Shannon has died he would no longer feel bound to her Priest gently refuses Priest realizes that the vampires have been using the trains to travel by day and attack the free towns by night with the walled cities at the end of the train line Hicks believes the cities are likewise protected by the sun but Priest explains that the cities massive clouds of smoke and ash have permanently deprived them of sunlight If the train reaches one of the cities the attack will be a slaughter Hicks who is in love with Lucy threatens Priest believing that Priest intends to kill her if she has been infected by the vampires Priestess explains that he cannot do so because Lucy is actually Priest s daughter and that Owen stepped in as a husband and a father when Priest was taken by the Church Lucy was never told the truth about her parentage While Priestess rushes ahead to plant a bomb on the railroad tracks Priest and Hicks board the train to rescue Lucy Battling vampires and Familiars the two are finally overpowered by Black Hat just as they find Lucy Black Hat is revealed as the priest who was lost in the attack on Sola Mira After being captured the vampire Queen gave him her blood turning him into the first Vampire Human hybrid who can survive the sun As Priest fights Black Hat Lucy discovers the truth about her parentage On the tracks ahead of the train Priestess battles several Familiars but one of them destroys the detonator for the explosives Instead she mounts the explosives on her motor bike and drives it into the train engine The explosion and subsequent derailment kills the vampires and engulfs Black Hat in flames while Hicks Priest Priestess and Lucy are able to escape Priest returns to the city and confronts Monsignor Orelas during Mass telling him of the burnt train containing the vampires bodies but not the Queen s He proves this by throwing a vampire head onto the floor and shocking everyone in the room Orelas still refuses to believe him declaring that the war is over while Priest says that it is just beginning Outside the city Priest meets Priestess who confirms that other Priests have been notified and will meet them at a rendezvous point Priest sets off into the sunset Cast EditPaul Bettany as Priest Karl Urban as Black Hat Cam Gigandet as Hicks Maggie Q as Priestess Lily Collins as Lucy Pace Brad Dourif as Salesman Stephen Moyer as Owen Pace Christopher Plummer as Monsignor Orelas Alan Dale as Monsignor Chamberlain Madchen Amick as Shannon Pace Jacob Hopkins as Boy Dave Florek as Crocker Joel Polinsky as Dr Tomlin Josh Wingate as FamiliarProduction EditThe priests of our story are like Jedi knights They have these supernatural abilities to fight vampires and they saved humanity before the movie even begins Now a generation later society has moved on from war and the priests are like pariahs They re almost like Vietnam vets they ve been cast aside by society and they re now reviled and feared Director Scott Stewart 3 Priest is directed by Scott Stewart and written by Cory Goodman The film is based on the supernatural horror and action Korean comics Priest by Min Woo Hyung The project was first announced in March 2005 when the studio Screen Gems bought Goodman s spec script 4 In January 2006 Andrew Douglas who directed The Amityville Horror was attached to direct Priest 5 In June 2006 actor Gerard Butler entered negotiations to star as the title character and filming was scheduled to start in Mexico on October 1 2006 6 Filming did not proceed and by three years later director Douglas had been replaced by Stewart 7 while Butler had been replaced in the starring role by Paul Bettany 8 Stewart and Bettany had previously worked together in the Screen Gems film Legion With a budget of 60 million 9 filming began in August 2009 in Los Angeles California 10 and it concluded in November 2009 11 The film was the most expensive production from Screen Gems to that date 9 and as of 2018 is still tied for third most expensive behind only Underworld Awakening and Resident Evil Retribution Tokyopop flew Min Woo Hyung to where production was taking place so the comics creator could visit the art department and discuss the film with Stewart The film diverges from the comics in following a different timeline of events and adding elements of the sci fi western cyberpunk and post apocalyptic science fiction genres 2 12 The director described Priest s vampires as not being human in origin and humans bitten by vampires became familiars instead 13 There are different forms of vampires such as hive drones guardians and a queen Since the vampires were intended to move quickly they were fully computer generated for the film While vampires are harmed by sunlight in most lore the film s vampires are instead photosensitive being albino cave dwellers Stewart said They are the enemy we don t really understand but we fought them for centuries They are mysterious and alien with their own culture You sense that they think and communicate but you don t really understand what they are saying The director also called Priest an homage to The Searchers with the title character being similar to John Wayne s character and the vampires being similar to the Comanche 14 The animated prologue for the film was created by American animator and director Genndy Tartakovsky 15 The production team includes 16 Michael De Luca Josh Bratman Shareena Carlson Joshua Donen Glenn S Gainor Steve Galloway Stuart J Levy Mitchell Peck Nicola SternTheatrical release EditPriest was released in the United States and Canada on May 13 2011 1 The film s release date changed numerous times in 2010 and 2011 17 It was originally scheduled for October 1 2010 11 but it moved earlier to August 27 2010 to fill a weekend slot when another Screen Gems film Resident Evil Afterlife was postponed 18 When the filmmakers wanted to convert Priest from 2D to 3D the film was newly scheduled for release on January 14 2011 19 It was delayed again to May 13 2011 so the film could attract summertime audiences 20 Priest was released outside the United States and Canada on May 6 2011 in four markets It grossed an estimated 5 6 million over the weekend with decent debuts of 2 9 million in Russia and 1 8 million in Spain It performed poorly in the United Kingdom with under 700 000 21 The film was released in the United States and Canada on May 13 2011 in 2 864 theaters with 2 006 having 3D screenings 22 It grossed an estimated 14 5 million over the weekend ranking fourth at the box office Its performance was considered subpar compared to similar films in the Underworld series and Resident Evil series 23 To date Priest has grossed an estimated 76 5 million of which 29 1 million was from North America 1 Critical reception EditPriest was largely panned by critics Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 15 based on reviews from 101 critics and reports a rating average of 4 00 out of 10 with a consensus that Priest is admittedly sleek and stylish but those qualities are wasted on a dull derivative blend of sci fi action and horror cliches 24 At Metacritic which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics the film received an average score of 41 based on 13 reviews indicating mixed or average reviews 25 CinemaScore polls reported that the average grade audiences gave the film was a C on an A to F scale citation needed See also EditLegion a film also directed by Scott Stewart and starring Paul Bettany Vampire films about vampires in cinema and other films featuring vampires References Edit a b c Priest 2011 Box Office Mojo Retrieved June 7 2011 a b Solis Jorge Apr 22 2011 Previewing Priest Exclusive Pics Plus Comments FANGORIA Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Retrieved Oct 12 2011 a b Marshall Rick August 24 2010 Why Post Apocalyptic Priest Won t Be Your Regular Vampire Story MTV Archived from the original on September 27 2010 Laporte Nicole March 7 2005 Screen Gems stakes claim to Priest pic Variety Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Douglas pulls Priest horror Variety January 24 2006 Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Laporte Nicole June 25 2006 Screen Gems collars Priest Variety Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Psy Ops mission for Legion director Scott Stewart The Hollywood Reporter October 14 2009 Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Kit Borys March 31 2009 Paul Bettany to battle vampires in Priest Reuters Archived from the original on March 5 2014 a b Kaufman Amy May 12 2011 Movie Projector Priest to flop Bridesmaids looks decent but Thor will pound both Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 12 2011 Two More Join Bettany s Priest Empire August 24 2009 Archived from the original on October 21 2012 a b Priest Wraps Production in L A ShockTillYouDrop com November 23 2009 Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Gingold Michael May 13 2011 Priest Film Review FANGORIA Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Retrieved Oct 12 2011 Warmoth Brian January 28 2010 Priest Director Reveals His Vampires Origins And Creator Min Woo Hyung s Role In The Film MTV Archived from the original on July 29 2010 Wax Alyse January 22 2010 Exclusive Director Scott Stewart Talks Priest FEARnet Archived from the original on August 14 2010 Goellner Caleb March 7 2011 Genndy Tartakovsky s Animated Priest Prologue Now Viewable on Mobile Phones MTV Priest 2011 IMDB Retrieved 2 April 2018 Subers Ray April 23 2010 Green Hornet Adds 3D Moves to 2011 Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on August 23 2010 Vejvoda Jim December 10 2009 Priest Takes RE4 s Place IGN Archived from the original on April 14 2010 Goellner Caleb February 5 2010 Priest Gets 3D Treatment New Release Date MTV Archived from the original on July 28 2010 Marnell Blair June 17 2010 Priest Pushed Back To Summer 2011 MTV Archived from the original on July 29 2010 Subers Ray May 10 2011 Around the World Roundup Fast Five Vanquishes Thor Box Office Mojo Stewart Andrew May 13 2011 Bridesmaids Priest face tentpoles at B O Variety Subers Ray May 15 2011 Weekend Report Thor Holds on to Throne Bridesmaids a Strong Second Box Office Mojo Priest Movie Reviews Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved February 6 2021 Priest Reviews Metacritic Retrieved May 25 2011 External links EditPriest at Box Office Mojo Priest at IMDb Priest at Metacritic Priest at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priest 2011 film amp oldid 1130715524, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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