Saturday, February 7, 2009

10 Films (or More) Any Catholic Should See

I was asked recently to recommend 10 films for a Catholic film group, picking 10 must see films. I decided to post them on my blog and provide alternatives in cases where I was uncertain I would meet agreement. These films are not all Catholic or even specifically religious, but are all films that could be viewed and discussed profitably by a Catholic film study group.

1. Winter Light by Ingmar Bergman. It is the second in Bergman's famous Trilogy of faith, along with Through a Glass Darkly and The Silence. The film explores the doubt and existential angst of a pastor alarmed by China's development of the atomic bomb. Alternatives by Bergman, besides the other two mentioned, might include Wild Strawberries, dealing with the question of loneliness, aging and death, a film recommended by the Vatican in it's famous list a few years ago. A supplement to the first film on the Criterion Collection edition is "Ingmar Bergman Makes a Movie", one of the best "making of" films I have ever seen, about Winter Light.
See Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_Light, The Criterion Collection, http://www.criterion.com/boxsets/89

2. The Gospel According to St. Matthew by Pier Pasolini. Made in BW 35 MM, raw, faith to the language of St. Matthew, controversial in part because Pasolini was a Marxist and a homosexual, yet generally conceded to be the best film ever on Jesus.
See Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gospel_According_to_St._Matthew_%28film%29 and also: http://www.glyphs.com/words/film/95/stmatt.html

3. The Color Of Paradise by Majid Majidi. Majidi is not a Christian, but an Iranian Muslim, influenced at least by Sufism. This film is the only discussion I know of in film of the theme of the Beatific Vision. It tells the story of a young blind boy and his suffering as his father betrays his interests. It explores the question of what it really means to see. An alternative would be his The Willow Tree, if it has been released to DVD yet, dealing with a blind professors who regains sight through an operation, but faces a challenge to his faith as a result. See Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majid_Majidi

4. A Man for All Seasons, the 1966 Academy Award Best Picture is on just about every list of favorite Catholic films. An alternative could be Becket, also an Academy Award Winner, exploring similar themes about a different saint.

5. The Flowers of St. Francis by Roberto Rossellini. It is based on the book The Little Flowers of Saint Francis and is the best film on this saint I have seen. The DVD extra includes an interview by his daughter that explains carefully the relationship between Rossellini's spiritual films and his earlier political/historical films. An alternative would be Francesco, with Mickey Rourke playing a manly St. Francis.

See Criterion Collection, http://www.criterion.com/films/874 and Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flowers_of_St._Francis

6. Andrei Rublev by Andrei Tarkovsky. This may not be his greatest film, but it explores very well the connection between art and religion. It tells a tale based loosely on Russia's greatest icon painter, about whom very little is known. See Wikipdia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrei_Rublev and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrei_Rublev_(film)

7. Into Great Silence by Phillip Groning. The best treatment of Monastic life I have seen . Gronning lives in the Grande Chartreuse, were almost total silence is practiced, for one year, without a crew, doing all the filming by himself. It,s simple and poetic.

See http://www.zeitgeistfilms.com/film.php?directoryname=intogreatsilence and also Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Into_Great_Silence

8. The Tree of Wooden Clogs by Ermano Olmi. It is on the Vatican list mentioned above. It deals with the life or rural peasants in Northern Italy about 1900. It deals with poverty, justice and religion, particularly the devotion to the rosary that Italian women had.

See http://decentfilms.com/sections/reviews/1907

9. Babette's Feast by Gabriel Axel. This film is based on a short story by Isak Dinesen and deals with the lives of poor pious Danes in small protestant sects. It deals with the return of a woman from Paris long gone from the community who proposes the scandalous-- a gourmet French meal. Is it about earthly pleasure, or the Eucharist? you decide.

See Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babette%27s_Feast

10. Finally, Robert Bresson, one of the greats of French film, with films strongly influenced by his Catholicism. Itt's hard to pick. His Diary of a Country Priest? His Trail of Joan of Arc ?
His Baltazar about a donkey as a type of Christ? Certainly for a Catholic study, one of those three.

See Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Bresson and also http://www.brightlightsfilm.com/24/bresson.html

3 comments:

  1. Just a quibble or two:

    I noticed the absence of Dreyer's "The Passion of Joan of Arc," but found it included in the Scarecrow list; likewise with "The Decalogue." Bergman used to be my favorite director, but it is difficult to choose any one of his films; I would probably opt for "The Magician." I am not a fan of Rossellini's film about St. Francis, having found it (on only 1 viewing) overly silly, sentimental, and boring; I would choose "Open City." Notice the names not on the list: Kubrick, Kurosawa, Mizoguchi, Ozu, et al. Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut" is a profound treatment of a society saturated with sexuality, Dr. Stanglove depicts the absurdity of the nuclear arms race.

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  2. Dear Roger,

    If you look on my second list, tehe next ten, I did include Dryer's film. Open City is a great film, but I would include it in a set on World War II. Thanks for your comments.

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  3. Hi Joe,

    At the Dominican Pastoral Conference in California we discussed many great films Catholics should see. Here is the list the group compiled. Some of my choices are here, but most of these I either haven't seen or wouldn't recommend. Such is the nature of group-think!

    My choices may be forthcoming if I ever get any air to breathe around here!

    Tender Mercies
    Galaxy Quest (teamwork)
    Broadway Danny Rose
    Second Chance Harvey (reconciliation, talents)
    Revolutionary Road
    Slumdog Millionaire
    Wide Awake
    Changing Lanes
    Smoke Signals
    House of Sand and Fog
    My Life as a Dog
    Le Grand Chemin (not on DVD)
    Sean of the Dead
    Bella
    Juno
    The Visitor
    Wall-E
    Lost Horizon
    Joan of Arc
    The Fall
    A.I.
    The Exorcism of Emily Rose

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