Showing posts with label Diary of a Country Priest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diary of a Country Priest. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

320) Clash (2009), 321) Priest (2011), 322) The Pit and the Pendulum (1991) and 323) Cul-de-Sac (1966)

320) Clash (2009) Dir: Le Thang Son Date Released (DVD): August 2011 Date Seen: August 13, 2011 Rating: 2.5/5

321) Priest (2011) Dir: Scott Stewart Date Released: May 13, 2011 Date Seen: August 14, 2011 Rating: 2.25/5

322) The Pit and the Pendulum (1991) Dir: Stuart Gordon Date Released: June 27, 1991 Date Seen: August 14, 2011 Rating: 2.75/5

323) Cul-de-Sac (1966) Dir: Roman Polanski Date Released: November 7, 1966 Date Seen: August 14, 2011 Rating: 4.25/5

Mostly middling but boy, how 'bout that Polanski? See my DVD round-up for Press Play.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

282) Diary of a Country Priest (1951)


282) Diary of a Country Priest (1951) Dir: Robert Bresson Date Released: April 1954 Date Seen: September 6, 2009 Rating: 2.5/5

Robert Bresson's Diary of a Country Priest is only consistently effective in conveying the crippling soul sickness of Father of Ambricourt (Claude Laydu) when its silent. Its initial reliance on insinuations supplied by brusque encounters with parishioners and hyper-melancholic journal entries that go beyond manic depression into emo hysteria is genuinely enthralling. In these scenes, Bresson's fetishization of Carl Dreyer's instrumental use of close-ups are appropriate, if not a bit hard to swallow, because they visually reflect the Father's self-fashioned image as a martyr. Once the film begins to relate the Father's anguish through long-winded conversations that start out coherent and ends up bafflingly cryptic dialogue, then I start to tune out. By that point, the sight of Laydu's face in close-up looks the son of a German Expressionist monster has a bad case of gas. I'm bitter because I cared.