Lambert Wilson and Michael Lonsdale in Of Gods and Men |
But as political tensions rock the country and militant Islamic factions gain ground, that relationship is put to the test.
The grand prize winner at the Cannes Film Festival May 2010, Xavier Beauvois’ extraordinarily moving and troubling Of Gods and Men enters the quiet, meditative world of these devout men. Their leader is Christian (Lambert Wilson), who sits at his desk reading the Quran, looking for the common threads between Islam’s great book and the Bible that he and his fellow Cistercians look to for instruction and inspiration.
Beauvois’ camera is watchful and unobtrusive, panning the monastery and its spartan rooms, documenting the brothers’ quotidian tasks, but also the modest ritual, the beauty, the illumination.
And then forces from beyond its walls threaten to bring everything down.
Based on the true story of seven French monks who were abducted by Algerian mujahideen in 1996, Of Gods and Men, sadly, remains as relevant today as ever, as religious, cultural, and political conflict explodes through Africa and the Middle East. Is there a place for reason, for an inclusive God, in a world mad with militancy and dogma?
The great veteran French actor Michael Lonsdale — he of the wry countenance and bushy eyebrows — plays the doctor among the monks, a man named Luc who works his way carefully down the rocky slope to his clinic in the village to treat the men and women, the young and the old, who seek his help. At a dinner in the monastery, with his brothers stationed around a long, plain table, he quotes Pascal: “Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction.”
It’s an observation of crushing truth.
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