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IMDbPro

Bruegel, le moulin et la croix

Original title: Mlyn i krzyz
  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
Bruegel, le moulin et la croix (2011)
Trailer for The Mill And The Cross
Play trailer1:57
1 Video
27 Photos
Period DramaDramaHistory

This movie focuses on a dozen of the five hundred characters depicted in Bruegel's painting. The theme of Christ's suffering is set against religious persecution in Flanders in 1564.This movie focuses on a dozen of the five hundred characters depicted in Bruegel's painting. The theme of Christ's suffering is set against religious persecution in Flanders in 1564.This movie focuses on a dozen of the five hundred characters depicted in Bruegel's painting. The theme of Christ's suffering is set against religious persecution in Flanders in 1564.

  • Director
    • Lech Majewski
  • Writers
    • Michael Francis Gibson
    • Lech Majewski
  • Stars
    • Rutger Hauer
    • Michael York
    • Charlotte Rampling
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lech Majewski
    • Writers
      • Michael Francis Gibson
      • Lech Majewski
    • Stars
      • Rutger Hauer
      • Michael York
      • Charlotte Rampling
    • 28User reviews
    • 104Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Mill and the Cross
    Trailer 1:57
    The Mill and the Cross

    Photos26

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    Top cast99+

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    Rutger Hauer
    Rutger Hauer
    • Pieter Bruegel
    Michael York
    Michael York
    • Nicolaes Jonghelinck
    Charlotte Rampling
    Charlotte Rampling
    • Mary
    Joanna Litwin
    • Marijken Bruegel
    Dorota Lis
    • Saskia Jonghelinck
    Bartosz Capowicz
    • Crucified
    Mateusz Machnik
    • Wheelfied
    Marian Makula
    • Miller
    Sylwia Szczerba
    • Netje
    Wojciech Mierkulow
    • Jan
    Ruta Kubas
    • Esther
    Jan Wartak
    • Simon
    Sebastian Cichonski
    • Peddler
    Lucjan Czerny
    • Bram
    Aneta Kiszczak
    • Mayken
    Oskar Huliczka
    • Horn Player
    Adam Kwiatkowski
    • Traitor
    Pawel Kramarz
    • Pedro De Erazu
    • Director
      • Lech Majewski
    • Writers
      • Michael Francis Gibson
      • Lech Majewski
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.84.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7petarmatic

    True gem!

    I really like when the come out with a film like this. I like costume dramas, but this one is so interesting because it was made based on a painting and it works with a very interesting subject of Protestantism in Flanders and tryouts of Spanish militia to eradicate it. Not a lot of the films was made about the subject, and it clearly shows desperation of the Spanish militia to eradicate, at that time, very strong Protestant movement in Flanders. How state of the affairs came to that? I would track it down to Pope Alexander VI Borgia and total corruption of the Curria of the late 1490s. It was inevitable that someone like Martin Luther to show up, and it was a downhill for the northern Europe from that time onwards as far as Roman Catholicism.

    Beside that, cinematography is great and costimography as well. True holiday for the eyes. I enjoyed every moment of it.
    8chaz-28

    A film inside of a painting; Up close and personal with 16th century Flanders

    The Mill and the Cross is a movie inside of a painting, specifically The Way to Calvary (1564) by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Pieter Bruegel (Rutger Hauer) is the main character in the film which takes turns following him as he decides how his painting will take shape and who will be in it and also follows the local peasants who go about their daily business in middle of 16th century Flanders. The background is always the actual painting's background with the mill high up on a rock looking down on a large field where most of the action occurs.

    Bruegel's patron is Nicolaes Jonghelinck (Michael York), a successful Flemish banker who spends his time learning from Bruegel about the people in the painting and what each section represents and also pontificates to nobody in particular about the current state of affairs in Flanders. In 1564, Spain ruled what is now Antwerp and Flanders. The Spanish militia seen in the painting in their red tunics seemed to be preoccupied with chasing down and torturing Protestant heretics. There are gruesome scenes in the film with a man tied to a wagon wheel hoisted up in the air with no defense at all while the birds have at him. A woman's fate is no better as she is shoved alive into an open grave while the red tunics fill the dirt in on top of her.

    The Way to Calvary itself does not show these particular atrocities. Instead, it has Jesus in the center hoisting his own cross towards his crucifixion. The exact moment the painting captures is Simon helping him with the cross because Jesus stumbled and fell down. Everyone's eyes are on Simon at this time instead of Jesus. In the foreground is Mary (Charlotte Rampling). She is helpless as she sits on the sidelines because there is nothing she can do to prevent the red tunics from carrying out their mission. The rest of the painting shows hundreds of peasants either watching the proceeding or going about their chores. Children play games on the hillside, a local peddler sells his bread, a horn player dances around, and above them all, the miller observes from his windmill.

    The Mill and the Cross is at its best when Bruegel is explaining his inspiration and how he plans to incorporate all of his ideas and scenes into one large landscape. He looks closely at a spider's web to discover where the anchor point on his painting will be and how to section off the rest of the action. Just as intriguing are the scenes of everyday life in 1564 Flanders. A young couple gets out of bed and takes their cow to the field for the day. Bruegel's wife and children wake up after him and get ready for breakfast which is a small slice of bread. The miller and his apprentice ready the mill for the day's tasks and the large wheels and gears moan into action.

    Rutger Hauer is excellent as Pieter Bruegel and he appears to be serving his artistic penance to atone for his ridiculous participation in Hobo with a Shotgun earlier this year. Michael York is taking a break from his voice over work and TV appearances to finally show up in a serious film again. Charlotte Rampling is sort of the odd man out here. Her screen time is sparse as Mary and she spends most of the time misty eyed observing all of the peasant movements around her.

    The Mill and the Cross is a Polish production directed by Lech Majewski who also aided in adapting the screenplay from a book of the same name by Michael Francis Gibson. The film was an official selection at this year's Sundance Film Festival and will most likely earn an Oscar nod for Best Costume Design. The costumes are remarkable and frequently take center stage over the performers.

    The Mill and the Cross is a bit reminiscent of The Girl with a Pearl Earring but instead of showing how the painting is made from the outside, this time, the filmmakers actually take you inside of the painting itself and walks on the same landscape as its subjects. There is little dialogue in the film which is not a problem because it is so absorbing to just sit back and watch the peasants wander around the area and Bruegel figure out how to tie everything together. I will not give it away, but the final shot of the film is as wonderful as the rest as the camera backs up and reveals something to the audience.

    If you are a movie patron with patience and an interest in art history, The Mill and the Cross is for you. If you get bored in movies without guns, flash bangs, and screaming, stay away.
    Deidra

    Painterly and absorbing

    I found this film to inspire the same contemplative mood and heightened awareness of similar films that build power without reliance on lots of dialogue, music or usual cinematic cues. If you appreciated "Into Great Silence" or "Vision" or "The Tree of Life" or even "2001" you will appreciate the poetic quality of this film. It is important for us to slow down occasionally and allow some films to affect us without the necessity of being slammed over the head with noise and speed and highly charged emotions. After all, for a film placed in its time, that is a more realistic portrayal of life during those centuries. This film illuminates the artistic process and aims of the artist. We are fortunate that the makers of this film dared to create this unique journey into a canvas of one of the world's great artists.
    7secondtake

    Astonishing and boring...not that everything needs a plot, but this needs more than just visuals

    The Mill and the Cross (2011)

    Maybe I anticipated this for too long, hearing about its production, and teaching in an Art History department myself. The result is both astonishing and boring as heck. I know, there is a kind of absorption that happens through silence and slow appreciation. And there is even the astonishment of looking without really thinking, or feeling, for the narrative or the characters.

    This is, for sure, a visually wonderful movie. The way it works out the scenery and milieu of a period based on a single painting is brilliant and ambitious. The mise-en-scene might in fact be the only and singular point of it all. So on that level, eleven stars. Terrific. Mind-blowing.

    But that exercise in naturalistic re-creation, in enlivening a masterpiece on canvas by Bruegel from 1564, is not, to me, enough. You will know after ten minutes whether to continue. I have heard of people being just spellbound by it all, so that hopefully would be your feeling.

    I tried to make the characters have meaning on some level, either in their interactions, or in their actions alone, or through what they did to the world around them. Much of what happens feels more medieval than Renaissance, to me, but I'm sure that was researched thoroughly. (Bruegel was painting at a time when the Renaissance from Italy had made its way thoroughly north to the lowland countries and beyond.)

    It is fun (and indicative of the seriousness here) that both Michael York and Charlotte Rampling took part, late in their careers. That was one of the draws, for sure. But don't expect revelations there, either. Expect in fact only what the director, Lech Majewski, intended—a film version of the painting, set in its larger context but always based on and drawing from this one admittedly fantastic painting. Which might be your starting point, before launching into this one and half hour homage.
    5lixy

    Gorgeous but flat and clunky

    This gorgeous reconstruction of Bruegel's painting is ultimately more impressive than inspiring. There is no character, no narrative, no emotion in this piece and there's not that much analysis, either, despite the director's claims. I just saw it at the SF Film Fest, and the likable and knowledgeable director gave a lengthy lecture a) on how long it took to find the fabric for the costumes and b) on the loss of our ability to read pictorial symbols. Sadly, the latter was not related to (or within) the film directly--that would have been interesting indeed!--and neither is the impressive (expensive) production design enough to make this work compelling.

    If you are interested in symbology and art history, see Peter Greenaway's, far superior Nightwatching, a film with a plot and lively characters as well as a fascinating view into the meanings (and the USE of meanings and symbols) of another famous Dutch painting, which, despite also suffering from some bombastic elements, still manages to engage the viewer in its own right as a movie.

    Also Derek Jarman's Caravaggio comes to mind as a film that uses tableaux to evoke the painter of the title. Despite--or perhaps due to--being somewhat opaque and strange, the Greenaway and Jarman films (and almost any of their work) are far more interesting than The Mill and the Cross, because they use the medium of film to SHOW and not TELL. This literal and slavish reproduction of the painting was impressive in its verisimilitude but ultimately pointless and superficial.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the movie, the two large paintings displayed behind Nicolaes Jonghelinck (Michael York) and his wife (Dorota Lis) in their house, are also works by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, "The Tower of Babel" (1563) and "Hunters in the Snow" (1565). They were indeed commissioned or at any rate owned by Jonghelinck at the time.
    • Goofs
      A few minutes before the end of the movie, a red automobile crosses the background between two houses, while Bruegel and Nicholas Jonghelinck are speaking in the foreground.
    • Soundtracks
      Miserere, Opus 44
      By Henryk Mikolaj Górecki

      Performed by the Silesia Philharmonic Choir (Chorus Master Jan Wojtacha)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 28, 2011 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Poland
      • Sweden
    • Official site
      • TVP VOD
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • Flemish
    • Also known as
      • The Mill and the Cross
    • Filming locations
      • Wieliczka, Malopolskie, Poland(mill interiors)
    • Production companies
      • Telewizja Polska (TVP)
      • Bokomotiv Freddy Olsson Filmproduktion
      • Odeon
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $312,187
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,354
      • Sep 18, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,116,180
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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