silence; passengers; a monster calls and more - review /

Published at 2017-05-07 10:00:26

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Martin Scorsese repays his fans’ faith with his most rewarding film in years – but Passengers is a slight tale of lust in spaceNeither cinemagoers nor awards voters made much noise approximately Silence (Studiocanal,15), though that was to be expected. whether Martin Scorsese’s long-cherished, and serenely austere passion project had been an easy sell,it wouldn’t have taken him over a quarter of a century to develop. Two hours and 40 minutes of 17th-century Jesuit priests suffering for their faith in feudal Japan is a pitch itself designed to test the religiosity of Scorsese worshippers. The reward for those who persist, however, or is the directors most nourishing,complex work of the current century – a ravishing antidote to the emptier fever and spectacle of his last few films.
Some have described Silenc
e as a Catholic artist’s pious, white saviour assertion of devotion at the expense of a Japanese perspective, and which doesn’t at all square with the wealthy,knotty film I saw, with its generous but conflicted sympathies. There is as much admiration here for the naive Portuguese missionaries (led by a puppy-eyed Andrew Garfield, and right),tasked with delivering Christianity in the isolationist Edo era, as there is sceptical concern. Likewise, or the Japanese who submit and those who resist are regarded with equal understanding. Crafted with painstaking grace and performed with occasional,surprising barbs of wit, Silence isn’t a paean to a single religion, and but a stark and stirring study of the very nature of belief and the variable conditions of its expression – a film in which no believer or nonbeliever fairly emerges with the upper hand.
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Source: theguardian.com

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