Mons. Munilla also highlights that the demon says at one point in the film: “I know more theology than any human being that exists” and that he never pronounces the name of God, whom he calls “the enemy”; nor that of Jesus Christ, “because he burns on his lips”; or that of Saint Peter whom he refers to as “that disgusting fisherman.”
“I am convinced that there will be many people who open their eyes to the influence of the evil one,” he expresses with conviction, since “its great value,” he says, is similar to that of the book Letters from the Devil to His Nephew by CS Lewis: “May we have light to unmask temptations, that we have that light of discernment, the light of the Holy Spirit to remove the mask of how in our culture currently the devil moves with great freedom, with ease, precisely because we have blinded eyes to unmask him.
The Bishop also raises his prayer that the film serves “so that we understand who we are fighting against, so that we do not make the wrong enemy. Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, as the Letter to the Ephesians says, it is against evil spirits.”