Un giovane prete a cui viene affidata la parrocchia di Ambricourt cerca di ottemperare ai suoi doveri mentre lotta contro un misterioso male allo stomaco.Un giovane prete a cui viene affidata la parrocchia di Ambricourt cerca di ottemperare ai suoi doveri mentre lotta contro un misterioso male allo stomaco.Un giovane prete a cui viene affidata la parrocchia di Ambricourt cerca di ottemperare ai suoi doveri mentre lotta contro un misterioso male allo stomaco.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Nominato ai 1 BAFTA Award
- 7 vittorie e 3 candidature totali
- Priest of Torcy (Curé de Torcy)
- (as Andre Guibert)
- Countess (La Comtesse)
- (as Marie-Monique Arkell)
- Dr. Delbende (Docteur Delbende)
- (as Balpetre)
- Canon (Le Chanoine)
- (as Gaston Severin)
- Mitonnet
- (as Serge Benneteau)
- La patronne du café
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Bit Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
life. I would rank it high up there with movies like The Bicycle Thief.
It depicts human frailty at its best (and consequently, worst) in a
very pure and painfully real light. I think this this is definitely a movie that cannot be remade, the
priest's expressions and anxiety are too perfect to be replaced. I
only wish I watched a good copy (mine skipped scenes and cut
dialogues). Regardless, this movie is definitely an all-time best,
and deals with such personal issues at such a personal level that
it can never age. It touches the soul straight on and literally takes
one's breath away.
From the beginning to the end of the film I was fascinated with the main character, and his goals and his aims, his beliefs and his passionate inclination to helping others -- rarely do you see such great work done in putting the spotlight on the character. Bresson truly shows himself to be a master of character depiction. Anyone who has ever experienced awkward social circumstances or has ever felt alienated can immediately relate to the Father.
I found the dialogue in this film to be at times absolutely shocking & amazing, and the actors to be filled with a lot of feeling; there are parts in this film that I will remember forever because of the fabulous writing and acting. You rarely see a film with as much poignant & sharp character interaction as this; I found myself always anticipating the next meeting that the Father would have with certain characters, always anticipating more of the amazing dialogue.
For those who are interested in religion, this film really hits the nail on the head. I feel that, although it is very much inclined towards Christianity and Christian thought, it was in no way overbearing and nor would it take away from the film for a non-Christian. In fact, what makes the dialogue so sharp is the debates and self-doubt that we see the Priest have from time to time. Overall, a terrific film and study of social relationships.
The very first line on his diary, he writes on it throughout, delineates a whole worldview here; absolute frankness, the most insignificant secrets of life, life without a trace of mystery, laid bare.
His intense sincerity is curious to those around him, a local churchman wonders with disapproval if he's not better off becoming a monk, this is a peoples job he says implying people just want to go on as they do with the small of life, not be upset in how they rationalize what they do.
And this is all so we can find ahead of us a life that retains its confounding mystery, a mystery that conceals hurt. A mother who has been so numbed by the loss of a child she turns a blind eye to suffering in her home. Two girls, both in unhappy homes, one smitten by him, the other comes to revile him because he preaches resignation and she's burning up with a desire to run off from an unhappy life.
There are several good things here. But I hit a stumbling block as a viewer in the philosophy behind it, I take this to be Bresson's; anguish as deep truth, obstinacy as spiritual fortitude, renounciation of life but his kind only imparts gloom and dejection.
This is all crude to me. For example the priest has a letter that would exonerate him from a certain wrongdoing being rumored but says nothing about it, the silence gives him strength. But, if we're here to take care of life and lead a way out of suffering, that means taking care of our own selves as well and doing everything we can to dispel illusion. This is just needless ego as purity; how is anyone better off not knowing that she really died in peace?
It's all essentially coming from Christian notions of grace where the body has to be mortified, the soul atone for sin by dejection, and the resulting anguish as proof of being close to the truth and price paid for it. This is all baggage for me, a romanticism of suffering in place of clear seeing. I know of a more eloquent "resignation" (which he preaches) in Buddhist non-attachment; a cessation of ego that doesn't demand self-mortification.
Another possible reading is too tantalizing to ignore but would go against the grain of why the film is lauded as pure and deep.
We see a young man who is well-meaning but a little befuddled in his efforts to be pure; he drives himself to sickness by his ascetic lifestyle and begins gradually to confuse the pain of that sickness with a pious torment of the soul in the course of doing the right thing, a surrogate Christ bearing the sins of mankind. It's only too late that he comes to recognize that love is all, awakened by how it has been wasted in his old classmate's home (a cynical, self- absorbed version of his intellectual self).
Maybe this was early for Bresson; I find this to be purism that is still beholden to self and preconceived ideas. Maybe his next films shed some light.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe hand and handwriting in the film belong to Robert Bresson.
- Citazioni
[subtitled version]
Countess: Love is stronger than death. Your scriptures say so.
Curé d'Ambricourt: We did not invent love. It has its order, its law.
Countess: God is its master.
Curé d'Ambricourt: He is not the master of love. He is love itself. If you would love, don't place yourself beyond love's reach.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Histoire(s) du cinéma: Les signes parmi nous (1999)
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 47.000 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 7674 USD
- 27 feb 2011
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 47.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 55 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1