MOVIE REVIEW
“The Innocents”
Grade: A
Starring Lou de Laage, Agata Buzek and Janna Kulig. Directed by Anne Fontaine. In French, Polish and Russian with English subtitles.
Not rated. Check listings for theaters. 1 hour, 55 minutes.
Bottom line: A dramatic tale that explores a number of compelling issues
“The Innocents” soars above its seeming contradictions.
A gripping psychological drama based on events more than half a century old, it has inescapable contemporary echoes. Laced with intensely emotional situations, it refuses to force the issue by pushing too hard. And it proves, yet again, that though moral and spiritual questions may not sound spellbinding they often provide the most absorbing movie experiences.
Directing and co-writing this compelling Franco-Polish story of the nature of belief and the way war collapses the gap between the sacred and the profane is veteran French filmmaker Anne Fontaine.
Inspired by the journal notes of Madeleine Pauliac, a young French Red Cross doctor who worked in Poland at the end of World War II, “The Innocents” (which was called “Agnus Dei” when it debuted at Sundance) has quite a story to tell, and in Fontaine (who shares writing credit with Pascal Bonitzer, Sabrina B. Karine and Alice Vial) it has a director who knows precisely how to tell it.
“The Innocents” is set in December 1945, six months after the end of the European war, in a Poland occupied by Russian troops. It begins quietly, in a Benedictine convent during one of the community’s seven daily sung prayer sessions. These sounds are pure and transporting, and the film returns to them frequently to counterpoint the ugliness that defines the outside world.
Occupied by Russian soldiers near the end of the war, the convent was the site of multiple rapes, which resulted in more than half a dozen nuns becoming pregnant. These women are in great need of medical attention they cannot get from Polish doctors because exposure would likely mean the closure of the convent and shame for the individuals involved.
Even providing medical treatment is difficult because the nuns’ vows discourage physical contact and revealing the body, even to a female doctor, and the threat of renewed attacks by soldiers is ever present. And that is not the half of it.
For her part, Mathilde, the only doctor the Mother Abbess will allow inside, has difficulties of her own to face. She has to hide what she is doing from her superiors at work, deal with any number of crises her convent visits precipitate and figure out her own feelings about Samuel (Vincent Macaigne), the cynical French Jewish doctor whose parents died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Strikingly acted by all concerned (especially Lou de Laage and her two Polish costars), impeccably put together by Fontaine without any false steps, “The Innocents” is also wonderfully lit, with frequent convent scenes invariably reminiscent of Italian Renaissance paintings.
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