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Apostasy

  • 2017
  • TV-14
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Sacha Parkinson and Molly Wright in Apostasy (2017)
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A faithful Jehovah's Witness is forced to shun her own sister because of a religious transgression. As the separation draws out, she starts to question the meaning of God's love.A faithful Jehovah's Witness is forced to shun her own sister because of a religious transgression. As the separation draws out, she starts to question the meaning of God's love.A faithful Jehovah's Witness is forced to shun her own sister because of a religious transgression. As the separation draws out, she starts to question the meaning of God's love.

  • Director
    • Daniel Kokotajlo
  • Writer
    • Daniel Kokotajlo
  • Stars
    • Molly Wright
    • Poppy Jhakra
    • Siobhan Finneran
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Daniel Kokotajlo
    • Writer
      • Daniel Kokotajlo
    • Stars
      • Molly Wright
      • Poppy Jhakra
      • Siobhan Finneran
    • 88User reviews
    • 50Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 5 wins & 21 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Photos8

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Molly Wright
    Molly Wright
    • Alex
    Poppy Jhakra
    • Doctor
    Siobhan Finneran
    Siobhan Finneran
    • Ivanna
    Sacha Parkinson
    Sacha Parkinson
    • Luisa
    Claire Hackett
    • Deborah
    Jacqueline Pilton
    • Sister Murphy
    Wasim Zakir
    • Brother Jatin
    Jessica Baglow
    Jessica Baglow
    • Cousin Michelle
    Christian Foster
    • Barry
    Bronwyn James
    Bronwyn James
    • Chloe
    Aqib Khan
    Aqib Khan
    • Umar
    James Quinn
    James Quinn
    • Elder Brian
    James Foster
    • Elder Alan
    Robert Emms
    Robert Emms
    • Elder Steven
    Clare McGlinn
    • Aunty Linda
    Luke Stevenson
    Luke Stevenson
    • Brother at Party
    Harrison Newell-Parker
    • Boy Solomon
    • (as Harrison Newell)
    Kathleen Robb
    • Young Girl 1
    • Director
      • Daniel Kokotajlo
    • Writer
      • Daniel Kokotajlo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews88

    6.92.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7connietownley

    What is life like for a Jehovah Witness?

    This is a realistic portrayal of the insulated life of a Jehovah Witness and the control they live under. The pain of isolation from family and community when one no longer wishes to be known as one of them. This is the reality for the thousands of Witnesses who have left. An eye opener for anyone who is curious about knowing more about Jehovah's Witnesses. The person you see at the cart or knocking at your door carries a heavy burden.
    8stevenrobertson-97899

    And the truth shall set you free

    Being brought up in the religion I was interested to watch this. I have to say whoever put this film together has a real insight into how it is. Made me feel really sad to be honest at the end. A religion that makes you choose between your life, your own flesh and blood and God. No loving God would ever do that. It depicts the Witnesses exactly as they are - when you're completely convinced of your own superiority nothing else matters. There's no real feeling, love or concern or care. Just what they believe is 'Jehovah's' will. A very lonely place to be. It's not until you become 'worldly' that you realise that you wouldn't want to live in the 'new system' anyway with people who you have nothing beneath the surface other than Jehovah and taking scripture way too literal. A lot worry about leaving the religion because they're worried about being lonely. Worried they will be shunned by family and friends for making a different choice but as the film really shows the reality of their religion is also very lonely. 'All is vanity ....'
    8philipfoxe

    So honest and real

    So many detailed reviews here from exJWs there's no point in going over it. It would have been so tempting to do a smear job on JW, but this film is not about profit or mudslinging. The writer is very fair. JW is not really that different from other religions and its adherents are just nice ordinary people. The accurate mundane lives of the characters is not just a condemnation of religion but a terrifying microsm of the insanity of religious belief in general Great cast, especially Ferranan who is so credible and restrained.
    9branzig1134

    This one hit hard

    First let me say, if you have no experience as a Jehovah's witness this might be a bit odd and confusing. As someone who was raised in this religion and later disfellowshiped (like the girl in the movie) I can say this movie is extremely accurate and heart breaking. The terminology used, the manorisms and interaction between those in the religion and outside is eerily familiar. The boredom, the magical thinking, paranoia and other hallmarks of daily life I experienced growing up are incredibly believably rendered in Apostasy. I must give credit to the actors for portraying so well members of such an insular religion, not an easy task for those with no experience with it.

    Again, I'm not sure I can recommend this movie for those without some JW context, but if you want to understand life inside this religion this is a pretty good way to do it.
    7Bertaut

    Powerful film-making

    Apostasy is the low-budget feature debut of writer/director Daniel Kokotajlo and, as the name implies, it tells the story of a breakdown in the relationship between a member of the faithful and the organised religion to which they adhere, which, in this case, is the Christian denomination movement known as Jehovah's Witnesses. However, whilst the film tells the story of one person abandoning their religion, it also tells the parallel story of two people who refuse to do so, committing themselves more and more to its practices, even as they come to question some of its dogma.

    Ivanna (Siobhan Finneran) is a mother of two girls, Luisa (Sacha Parkinson) and her younger sister Alex (Molly Wright). Living in a working-class area in Oldham, Greater Manchester, all three are Witnesses, with Alex in particular embracing the role of a publisher (the name for Witnesses active in proselytising), even going so far as to learn Urdu so she can better preach to people in the neighbourhood. The film begins with Alex attending her doctor (Poppy Jhakra), who is explaining that her condition means she may need a blood transfusion in the future. Giving her a document to sign agreeing to allow such a procedure, the doctor promises to keep it a secret from Ivanna. Alex, however, has no interest in signing. Born anaemic, she received a blood transfusion when only a few hours old, against the wishes of Ivanna, and because of this, she is burdened with a sense of guilt, believing she must atone by adhering rigidly to Witness doctrine, helping at the local Kingdom Hall (the term used by Witnesses for their places of worship), and preaching door-to-door. Meanwhile, Luisa returns home from college, and tells Ivanna that she's pregnant, and even worse, the father is not a Witness. Ivanna is disgusted, demanding that Luisa marry the father. When she refuses, she is "disfellowshipped". However, as one of the requirements of disfellowship is that family members who remain Witnesses cannot have any significant contact, Ivanna forces Luisa to leave home. At the same time, Steven (Robert Emms) arrives in the neighbourhood as a new elder. He becomes friends with Ivanna and Alex, and after a few weeks, proposes to Alex.

    This plot summary takes us up to about a half-hour in the film, which is loosely divided into three discernible acts - the first focuses on Alex, the second Luisa, and the third Ivanna. At the end of the first act, the plot takes a turn, which I have to admit, I didn't see coming, and which changes everything for the family and how they conduct themselves and observe their religious beliefs.

    To fully engage with the film at a critical level, one must first contextualise its milieu a little. Kokotajlo is himself an apostate, as he was raised a Witness, but left in his 20s. According to official publications, there are now over eight million Witnesses worldwide. The refusal of blood transfusions (an important theme in the film) was introduced in the Netherlands in 1945, based primarily on Genesis 9:4 ("Only flesh with its life - its blood - you must not eat") and Leviticus 17:10 ("If any man of the house of Israel or any foreigner who is residing in your midst eats any sort of blood, I will certainly set my face against the one who is eating the blood, and I will cut him off from among his people"). In 1961, having a transfusion became grounds for disfellowship, at which time Dr. Américo Valério claimed transfusions lead to "moral insanity and sexual perversion," whilst Dr. Alonzo Jay Shadman argued, "the poisons that produce the impulse to commit suicide, murder, or steal are in the blood." It is estimated that in the period 1961-2016, over 33,000 Witnesses died rather than accept blood. In 2016 alone, there were over 1,200 deaths.

    One of the most impressive aspects of the film is how implicitly Kokotajlo introduces many of these themes, trusting in the audience's intelligence to do the legwork, whilst not even providing us with music cues to tell us what we should be thinking at any given moment. For example, like most religions, Witnesses considers itself the only true religion, and only its adherents will be saved. This is brought to the fore when Alex encounters people who don't subscribe to her beliefs; meeting two of Luisa's college friends, she is bemused that they don't agree with Witness teachings, and even more incredulous when she finds out that not only are they not Witnesses, they are areligious altogether. It's a scene which deftly demonstrates the isolationist nature of Witnesses without telegraphing it.

    Tied closely to this is the theme of having independent thoughts, which, again, is introduced very subtly. After Luisa is disfellowshiped, she makes an effort to return to the fold, but Steven expresses doubts as to whether she will succeed, as she "has too many of her own ideas," something frowned upon by Witnesses. That Kokotajlo views this as a central theme in the film is evidenced in multiple interviews he has given. Speaking to The Irish Times, he says, "one of the biggest things that happened to me was going to college. Suddenly, people were asking for my opinion on things. That was a new concept for me as a Witness. At the Kingdom Hall, if you were asked questions, it was an opportunity to say what was already there in the Watchtower." Similarly, speaking to The Guardian, he states, "I went to college, and that was the key, really. People would ask my opinion on something, and I would be scrambling round trying to find an answer in a text somewhere - because that's what life as a Witness is like. It's group thinking based on the interpretation of a text." Likewise, speaking to Screen International, he explains, "I was harbouring doubts since I went to college. I realised that people at college were interested in your opinion. That was a new concept to me because being a Witness it was always about reaffirming the text, group-think, it wasn't about encouraging independent thought."

    Another important theme is even more implicit - likening Witnesses to Scientology. This is never overtly addressed, but Kokotajlo's presentation of how Witnesses deal with certain issues unquestionably draws parallels with how Scientologists deal with those same issues. This is perhaps most obvious in how the film depicts disfellowship, emphasising that the family of someone who has been disfellowed must cut off contact with them. This is virtually identical to the notion of "suppressive persons" in Scientology, and according to Kokotajlo, "that's representative of what a lot of Witnesses have to go through. Family members are forced to shun other family members."

    Looking at the film in a more aesthetic sense, an interesting stylistic device is how Kokotajlo presents characters talking to Jehovah. Although they speak aloud, the people around them don't hear what they're saying (think of a soliloquy on a crowded stage in Shakespeare). This essentially positions the viewer as Jehovah - just like Him, we are in a position to hear what others cannot. Indeed, on a couple of occasions, this positioning of the viewer is foregrounded even more, as characters speak direct-to-camera. It's a daring move, but one which is extremely well handled, unifying form and content.

    The film is undeniably bleak, but never melodramatic, in its depiction of the conflicts that can arise when a family dynamic is in diametrical opposition to Witness doctrine. However, a vital point is that whilst the film is highly critical of the closed-off nature of the religion, the rules and regulations, it depicts very humanised characters. In relation to this, Kokotajlo says, "one of the aims of the film was to treat the Witnesses with a lot of respect. I have a lot of compassion for the people within the religion. It's the rules that the organisation creates that I have an issue with. Not the people trying to navigate those rules."

    Along the same lines, the acting is exemplary, which each of the three leads evoking both sympathy and derision at different points. That the viewer can empathise with a staunch fundamentalist such as Ivanna is testament both to Finneran's nuanced performance and Kokotajlo's compassionate screenplay. The story obviously comes from a place of respect; this is not an arbitrary and/or sarcastic hit-job written by someone who is bitter about their time in the religion, but is instead a presentation of how Witness dogma can affect the people on the ground. Dogmatic proclamations from on-high are all very well and good, but what happens when they clash with the everyday? This is essentially what the film is about, and Kokotajlo handles it brilliantly.

    From a directorial point of view, he keeps things simple and functional. The lack of budget works for the narrative, as Kokotajlo shuns any kind of directorial gymnastics in lieu of a pseudo-documentarian approach to the material, with the influence of people such as Anthony Asquith, Terence Rattigan, and Ken Loach unmistakable. In this sense, Oldham comes across as a very real and lived-in neighbourhood, as opposed to an abstract society which feels like it doesn't exist beyond the parameters of the text.

    All things considered, this is strong filmmaking; in equal measure emotive without being apologist, and informative without being condemnatory - not an easy balance to pull off by any means.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Writer and director Daniel Kokotajlo was himself a Jehovah's Witness for some years and raised in the religion.
    • Quotes

      Luisa: Do you know how it feels to think Jehovah the Almighty is punishing you, directly, all the time?

      [pause]

      Luisa: Why--when I'm sorry?

    • Connections
      Featured in Granada Reports: 20 July 2018: Evening Bulletin (2018)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Apostasy?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 27, 2018 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Urdu
    • Also known as
      • Apostazija
    • Filming locations
      • Oldham, Greater Manchester, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Frank & Lively
      • Frank & Lively
      • iFeatures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $434,336
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.50 : 1

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