Directed by: John Michael McDonagh.
Written by: John Michael McDonagh.
Starring: Brendan Gleeson (Father James), Chris O'Dowd (Jack Brennan), Kelly Reilly (Fiona Lavelle), Aidan Gillen (Dr. Frank Harte), Dylan Moran (Michael Fitzgerald), Isaach De Bankolé (Simon), M. Emmet Walsh (The Writer), Marie-Josée Croze (Teresa), Domhnall Gleeson (Freddie Joyce), David Wilmot (Father Leary), Pat Shortt (Brendan Lynch), Gary Lydon (Inspector Stanton), Killian Scott (Milo Herlihy), Orla O'Rourke (Veronica Brennan).
Calvary
opens with Father James (Brendan Gleeson), a priest in a small Irish coastal
town sitting in a confessional, listening as one of his parishioners tells him
about the repeated sexual abuse he suffered as a child at the hands of a
priest. The mystery man then tells Father James about his plan to get revenge
on the Catholic Church who allowed it to happen – he’s going to kill Father
James in exactly one week – not because James is a bad priest, but because he’s
a good one. Killing a bad priest would be too easy and wouldn’t mean anything.
But killing a good priest – now that would send a message.
That
is the setup for the move, but doesn’t really tell you much about how it is all
going to play out. This isn’t a whodunit by any means – when James goes to see
the Bishop, he says he knows who it was, although he doesn’t divulge that information.
Nor does he go to the police – even though since the man wasn’t really
confessing, and was talking about future actions, James would be well within
his rights to do so and not break the vow of the confessional. James doesn’t even go to the man and try and
talk him out of what he’s going to do. Instead, he spends the ensuing week
tending to his flock – a flock that pretty much uniformly resents him, and
wishes he would go away. They don’t even try to hide their sins – not from
James nor from anyone else. In fact, most of them flaunt them to James to see
if they can provoke a reaction out of him. From the man who may be beating his
wife (Chris O’Dowd), to that wife (Oria O’Rourke) who is openly having an
affair with an African immigrant (Issach De Bankole) who openly challenges
James. To the bartender, bitter at his lot his life, and the young man in a
bowtie that may be a budding psychopath, to the former pupil James visits in
jail who definitely was one to the doctor, an open atheist, with a story to
explain why. Then there’s the rich man, drinking his life away in his mansion
after his wife and children left him – he made his money leading up the global
financial crisis, which hit Ireland harder than most, and knows he won’t be
punished for it. Even the local cop doesn’t hide his relationship with a cocky
male prostitute. James’s daughter (Kelly Reilly) – he entered the priesthood
after his wife died years before – is in town for a few days as she recovers
from her latest suicide attempt. Almost all of them still attend Mass every
Sunday – and then spend the rest of the week doing what they’re told not to. The
only two people who seem kind to Father James are, not coincidentally, not
Irish – an American writer (M. Emmett Walsh – nice to see him in a movie again,
especially since I thought he had died), although he is planning on killing
himself, and a French woman (Marie Josee Croze) who is kind to Father James
after he gives the Last Rites to her husband.
The
movie was written and directed by John Michael McDonagh – whose roots as a
playwright show in the movie, which is essentially made up of a series of
verbal two-handers between James and the various people in town. Yet, Calvary
is not just a photographed play – the landscapes are beautiful, and evoke the
Irish films of John Ford – although McDonagh is not romanticizing Ireland like
Ford did. It would be easy to say that Calvary is another Christ tale – where
Father James stands in for Jesus, willing to sacrifice himself to redeem the
sins of his flock. But that wouldn’t quite be accurate either – because James
knows full well that his death wouldn’t help redeem anyone. His death would
both more meaningless than Jesus’, since it won’t redeem anyone, but the
personal sacrifice even greater since he’s going willingly anyway.
Gleeson
is terrific in the movie, giving a performance of tremendous empathy that finds
notes of humor throughout the darkness of the movie. He also starred in
McDonagh’s first film – The Guard – and his brother, Martin McDonagh’s, first
film In Bruges, and has proven to be a key collaborator for the brothers. It is
a great enough performance to help overcome some of the dialogue in the film –
which is a little too on the nose at times – and the fact that I think McDonagh
has bitten off a little more than he can chew in one movie – not all of his
risks payoff, and he piles it on a little thick at times.
Still Calvary is a fine film – beautiful, well-acted by the entire ensemble, and for the most part well written. Like The Guard, I don’t think it’s a great film. But it’s good enough to make me believe that McDonagh will make a great one eventually.
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