Competition
Dir. Barbara Sass
To begin with, in reality the
events turned out to happen in a much notorious way. The noted filmmaker
Barbara Sass intentionally avoided the most chocking circumstances,
which had taken place in 2007 in one of the Polish nunneries in the
provincial town of Kazimierz Dolny. Anyhow, according to Sass, she did
not try to document what happened there, and did not even talk with the
nuns who were participants of the events.
A sense of taste and
balance didn’t’ allow the helmer to exploit the most scandalous details
which would certainly unnerve the viewer - in order to make one come to
some more general conclusion. One of the two Polish entries into the
Competition of The Moscow International - In the Name of the Devil –
tells of the story about a priest, father Franciszek (Mariusz
Bonaszewski), a renegade Franciscan monk and a charismatic charmer, who
comes into the convent propagating a radically unorthodox conception of
faith, calling on the nuns to devote to the Lord not only their souls,
but their bodies too.
Foreseeing complications, the new confessor
and his staunch assistant – the severe fanatic mother superior (Anna
Radwan) barricaded the nunnery and enclosed it with barbed wire, so
nobody was able to break through the thick stone walls. The inhabitants
of the convent – mostly young and naïve girls, disarmed by religious
fanatism, appear victims of mass psychosis. But in any community,
whatever insane, always at least one person occurs who can oppose the
total madness. The plot revolves around the 20-years old Anna, the girl
who is tortured by nightmares from some terrible past. Whereas strongly
determined to get rid from her demons,
Anna (Katarzyna Zawadzka) is
trying to resist the manipulations of the priest who evidently
substitutes himself for the God craving for the girls’ flesh.
Long
before the premiere in Poland the film has been much rumoured about as
the subversive gesture aimed against the institution of faith. “I myself
am a Catholic and I have not done this film against the Church, - the
director objects. - It was conceived against people who try to
manipulate others so as to realize their goals”. Thus Anna’s revolt
stands for mutiny against any kind of concealed and ingenious
manipulation experienced by people in our informational society.
Classical
narration deceitfully prompts us that we wisely predict the finale.
Against all expectations the leader of the Polish ‘female cinema’ brings
us to an absolutely unexpected ending telling something nonpresumable
about the mysterious woman’s soul.
Nina Tsyrkun
01-07-2011
In the Name of the Devil / W imieniu diabła
Published in
Festivals