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Of Gods And Men (Des Hommes Et Des Dieux) 18 May, 2010 | By Jonathan Romney Dir: Xavier Beauvois. France 2010. 120mins One-time enfant terrible Xavier Beauvois has long been a respected presence on the French scene, making his name with dramas such as Don’t Forget You’re Going To Die (1995) and the police story Le Petit Lieutenant(2005). With Of Gods and Men, his time for wider recognition has surely come, this thoughtful but urgent piece showing that Beauvois has matured into a masterly director with tight, calm control of his material.
Miles from the edgy, confrontational tenor of Don’t Forget…, Beauvois’s new film muses on the meaning of religious vocation in a violent world, and tackles its difficult subject with authoritative, non-sensationalist forcefulness. Timely themes - the dialogue between Islam and Christianity, questions of fundamentalist violence – make for a newsworthiness that will boost the film’s visibility in
The religious milieu might seem a drawback for wider sales appeal, but given the surprise niche success ofInto Great Silence, the 2005 German documentary about Trappist monks, this accessible and soberly life-affirming film should find solid uptake among buyers of material for discerning art-house audiences. Festivals will pledge their faith big-time.
The film is inspired by real events, the still not entirely explained kidnap and murder of seven monks in Algeria in 1996 – but the narrative leads slowly round to the tragedy, which happens only at the very end, and largely off-screen. In a Cistercian monastery in Key moments include a scene in which the monks resist the menacing presence of an army helicopter by effectively chanting it away; and a sort of Last Supper, as the monks enjoy each other’s company to the strains of ‘ + + + + + + + + + + +
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Dear Father Donald, You kindly ask for my thoughts on the title chosen for the film depicting the life of the Atlas Martyrs, "Of Gods and Men". I believe that the title is telling of the Algerian crisis, indeed of radicalism itself... In the Catholic Church understanding, acceptance, and even where these fail, tolerance is shown for all faiths, for we believe that there is One God who embraces all mankind and who is honoured by all religions in their own way. I do not know what the radicals believe, their actions are so foreign to belief in the God of love, but their fanatiscism suggests to me that they must believe in God in a totally different way. And thus the film charts the life of 'Men' and of more than one god... Those who watch the film will judge the 'Men' of either side, and, I believe, will know beyond doubt the God (singular) who reigns in the hearts of the Atlas brothers and who is witnessed to by their actions. … in Our Lord, William. |
Wednesday 9 June 2010
Of Gods And Men?
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