'If you could hear the voice of God, would you want to keep it secret?' A historical drama based on the memoirs of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order. This is the story of a... Read all'If you could hear the voice of God, would you want to keep it secret?' A historical drama based on the memoirs of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order. This is the story of a soldier, a man of vice and violence who, in his attempt to turn to the light, was forced ... Read all'If you could hear the voice of God, would you want to keep it secret?' A historical drama based on the memoirs of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order. This is the story of a soldier, a man of vice and violence who, in his attempt to turn to the light, was forced to wrestle with his inner demons to the very brink of death. A Filipino production shot in... Read all
- Awards
- 6 wins & 4 nominations total
- Dona Ines
- (as Isabel Garcia-Lorca)
- Figueroa
- (as Jonathan Mellor)
- Surgeon
- (as Aitor Beltran)
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Born into a regal and wealthy family, Iñigo López de Loyola (Andreas Muñoz) is a proud Spanish knight who draws chief delight in his military profession, a young man who pursuits a life of fame and vanity. Instead of earning his desire for a hero's death during a battle in Pamplona, he ends up crippled when a French cannonball shatters his right leg. Boredom and frustration starts to seep through his soul in a way pain does to one's body so he forces himself to read the books he has at hand: The Life of the Christ and The Lives of the Saints. After a spiritual calling compels him to live a life bound by the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, he is faced with allegations of blasphemy, and plagued by his inner demons, which he has to conquest as he tries to listen to the voice of God.
Dy and his wife Cathy Azanza's script exudes some flashes of brilliant poetry. It even surprises with a handful moments of humor and some lines which I hope are inspired by Sun Tzu's Art of War. (one of which is "If your enemy is angry, then you have already won.") However, it has the tendency to oversell its message that at times the dialogues seem to be mere discussions of theology. The excessive third person narrations are also occasionally distracting. Narrations like "Iñigo dons his new armor, he opens the door " assumes that the audience is blind to acknowledge what is happening on-screen. It is squandering Muñoz, who is already an excellent actor, for the script to spell out his every single emotion.
While it is a smart choice to focus on a certain phase in Iñigo's life – his conversion from being a sinner to a saint – the film is yearning for a more solid story. The first half has a slow pace and you can tell it as the days are evidently passing by. As the story trudges along Iñigo's early life as a soldier, his conversion, his Spiritual Exercises and his encounter with The Inquisition, the plot structure suddenly looks strange when it gets to the blood-curling climax which actually happens on a flashback (or is it a dream sequence? I'm confused up till now). The story doesn't really need to be that linear, however, the over-reliance on flashbacks breaks the emotional momentum when it gets back to the present.
While Dy's efforts to handle such a gargantuan religious biopic occasionally fall apart, Ignacio De Loyola manages to deliver its greatest gift to its audience – the deep understanding for discernment. Our souls are continually drawn into two directions: towards goodness and towards sinfulness but if we peel away the many layers of our desires, fears and ambitions, we'll find God there. Hence, every word and every action should be done for His greater glory. The analogy of the Ignatian spirituality and watching a movie is really not that hard to follow. In the cinemas, you will be faced to choose between the two: a mainstream film or a religious film full of philosophical and theological substance.
Full review: http://www.filmpolicereviews.com/reviews/ignacio-de- loyola
Andreas Muñoz, intense and mostly alone on screen, does his best with a wobbly script. We meet Iñigo (his pre-saint name) as a minor noble turned frat boy: drinking, whoring, and stabbing Frenchmen. Then comes the obligatory cannonball-to-the-leg moment, followed by an extended "spiritual recovery" montage that feels like a pilgrimage in real time.
Eventually, he swaps his sword for sandals and sets off to preach. Along the way, he's thrown in jail by the Spanish Inquisition for being a little too into Jesus. Cue a painfully long CGI "spiritual battle" atop a digital mountain that looks like it came free with Windows XP.
For a low-budget film, it's baffling that they blew their money on this absurd scene instead of tightening the story. After more theological chit-chat, Iñigo is released and heads to France to start the Jesuit order. Inspiring, I suppose, if you're not already asleep.
It's not the worst saint biopic ever made, but it's close. Disappointing.
This self-biographic movie describes Ignatius of Loyola's fundamental and essential role in history as a soldier , a sinner and a Saint . Detailing his brave defense at the battle of Pamplona , fencing alongside the walls to impede the French Army go into the town . Being competently played by Andreas Muñoz as Ignatius , Julio Periñan and Javier Godino, among others . Resulting to be a historical fresco showing Ignatius of Loyola as a Warrior , as a Founder of the Jesuit Order and as a Saint . It contains colorful and evocative cinematograhy , as well as rousing musical score . The motion picture was well directed by Paolo Dy in budget enough .
Alrightly based on historical events about this great Spanish figure . As Ignatius was both , a military and a religious man . Founder of the Compañia e Jesús or Jesuit Order , he emerged as a really brooding and spiritual person during the famous Contrareform or anti-Protestant Reform. At París, Iñigo and his companions founded the Jesuit Order in 1540 . Sworn to go whereever the Holy Father commands , the Jesuits shaped history at the vanguard of the Church. Ignatius of Loyola , Creator of the Jesuit Order , being its First General , formed just over 1000 members , outstanding the following ones : Francisco de Borja , Francisco Javier , Diego Lainez , and founding a lot of schools and religious places . He wrote the Spiritual Exercices that caused an enormous influence as a tool to discernment , getting religiosity and divine faith . Ultimately , Ignatius Loyola was canonized.as Saint in 1622.
All-in-all it was a good film! Would recommend to everyone interested in the life of St. Iggy 😊
It is an intense transformation, having pledged his life to a princess then switching allegiance during his recuperation from a battle wound to a life in the service of God. His wound left him with a limp, a mark of dishonor since he could no longer soldier. It is here that the narrative acquires interest, as the earlier battle scenes had an artificial quality, as though filmed on a sound stage. It takes off as he finds his true calling and is accompanied by some excellent, well written dialogue, especially in some admirable speechifying instances. The overall quality of the script sets 'Ignacio de Loyola" apart from most other films made nowadays and accounts for my rating.
This movie will probably get a bad rap from critics due to its religious nature, but "Ignacio de Loyola" is about much more than that. It is about change, a change of mind and of lifestyle, a change of values and the discovery of what was front and center all the while, what really counts in life. Ignatius Loyola is a saint, but came by it the hard way - steeped in the temporary and ignoring the spiritual. We can all relate to that.
Did you know
- TriviaAlso, as the first commercial, color feature film to be filmed and shot in Spain by a Filipino company (with ties to the Jesuit organization in the Philippines), it was also shot in English--which is NOT the native tongue of either the Philippines or Spain; but of the 2nd colonizer of the Philippines, the USA. (Note: the Jesuit operation in the Philippines is governed by the New York province of the Jesuit order).
- Quotes
Calixto: May God grant you safe passage on all your journeys ahead. May you find companions worthy of your dreams. May your plans always be bold, and may your courage rise to meet them. May you live to bring the love of God to all the corners of the earth, to the most distant peripheries of His Church. And may your passion always burn brightly - that in God's time, you may set the world on fire.
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $950,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $195,250
- Runtime1 hour 58 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1