Calvary
I'll have a review up soon of the other really worthwhile movie to come out this week, but I can safely say that if you're going to see one film this week, definitely make it this one. And I don't say this lightly but Calvary may well beat Boyhood as being THE movie to see this month.
This review is also up at Channel 24.
This review is also up at Channel 24.
What it's about
The
good, well-liked Catholic priest (Brendan Gleeson) of a small town in
Ireland is marked for death by a disturbed congregant, who swears to
make him pay for the entirely unrelated actions of a paedophilic
priest who abused him as a child. With what may be one week left to
live, the priest is forced to confront an increasingly belligerent
community and a daughter who had just attempted to end her own life,
all the while being racked by doubts about his faith, about his role
as a Catholic priest and about the decision in his life leading that
lead him up to that point.
What we thought
John
Michael McDonagh blasted on to the scene a couple of years with the
Guard, a brilliant, blackly comic crime-film that boasted what may
have well been a then-career-best performance by its star, Brendan
Gleeson. Unlike so many promising new directors, however, McDonagh
has not fallen prey to the “sophomore slump” and has delivered a
film that not only builds on the promise of the Guard but takes the
kind of giant leap forward that most filmmakers take years to so much
as attempt.
While
the Guard was an exhilarating, bitingly funny piece of sharp
entertainment, McDonagh sets his sights much higher with Calvary.
Quite aside for its stunningly moody cinematography, pitch perfect
performances and dialogue so sharp you could cut yourself on it,
Calvary is a deep, multi-layered work of art with plenty to say and a
personal axe or two to grind. It's also a film steeped in Catholicism
but with its piercing questions about faith, about the nature of sin,
about personal responsibility and, most damningly, about the evils
perpetrated by the Catholic Church and those who supposedly represent
it, it is as far away from those cheesy Church-approved “Faith-based
films” as it is possible to be.
There's
a very real sense that Calvary is an incredibly personal film for its
director, as you can almost feel his personal struggle with the
monolith that is Catholicism coming through in every frame of the
film. And yet, it's a struggle that is neither solipsistic, nor
particularly alienating to non-Catholics.
Being
Jewish, I don't know much about the Catholic faith, its mythology and
its dogma beyond what is shown in the media and/ or is part of
general knowledge, so I missed, for example, the significance of the
title Calvary (hint: it's not “cavalry” misspelled) and I
certainly never caught on that the twelve supporting characters in
the film represent the twelve apostles. However, none of this took
away from my experience of watching the film. Rather, learning about
this stuff later only added to what was already a mind-blowing
cinematic experience.
That
it's pretty much a perfectly made film on every level is indeed part
of its unqualified success, to be sure, but what makes it more than
simply an excellent film; what made it stick with me days after
seeing it, was its powerful emotional core and fully functioning
brain that were, for all intents and purposes, embodied in the
imposing form of Brendan Gleeson and his well-intentioned,
good-hearted but endlessly complex character. Glesson is excellent in
Calvary in the same way that water is wet: obviously and
overwhelmingly so.
Every
expression he makes and every word he utters speaks volumes about his
character, about the underlying struggles that he's dealing with and
even about the themes that lie at the heart of the film. McDonagh has
claimed that his character goes through the five stages of grief in
the film (though not in the usual order) but judging by Gleeson's
performance, there seem to be twenty to twenty-five steps to the
process that none of us knew about. He's in very nearly every scene
in the film and though he has plenty of exceptional support from an
often quite unlikely cast (Dylan Moran as a depressed, nihilistic
banker, Domnhall Gleeson as a Lector-like serial killer), each of
whom we get to meet as he goes about his business trying to
positively affect the lives of his parishioners, Calvary is never
anything but his film.
I
suppose the usual art-house warnings should apply: Calvary is for
discerning viewers only who can appreciate a slow pace, a moody
atmosphere, a pitch-black sense of humour and more allegories and
allusions than are possible to catch in a single viewing but,
honestly, if you don't get this film, its your problem, not the
film's. Calvary is, in no uncertain terms, a richly rewarding,
near-perfect masterpiece that reminds us of the true power of cinema
to move us, to challenge us and to deeply affect us. And you don't
have to be Catholic to see that.
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