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Molokai: The Story of Father Damien by Paul Cox
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DVD detailsActor: Chris Haywood, David Wenham, Derek Jacobi, Jan Decleir, Kate Ceberano Director: Paul Cox DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Picture Format: 2.35:1 Running Time: 113 minutes DVD Release Date: 2000-09-26 Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: Unapix / a-Pix Ent.
DVD Reviews of Molokai: The Story of Father DamienDVD Review: Molokai; The story of Father Damien Summary: 5 StarsJust a super movie about Fr. Damien's life on the leper colony and all the good he did and what he had to endure before catching the desease himself. I highly recommend this movie, an excellent production and well directed.
DVD Review: Do what your heart tells you to do... Summary: 5 Stars"Molokai" is not so much about Father Damian, as it is about the importance of compassion towards those, who find themselves as "unfortunates" through no fault of their own. That Father Damian defied his superiors in defense of the lepers sent to the then remote island colony on Molokai, says volumes about the man's convictions on their account. He spent years among them, improving their standard of living (which was best described as "squalor", before his arrival), and bringing many into the fold of Christianity, before succumbing to the disease himself.
Sam Neil, Peter O'Toole and Kris Kristofferson give fine performances. It is David Wenham, however, that deserves special mention. His performances in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy were good, but hardly an indicator of his abilities. In "Molokai", his performance as Father Damian is superb! He brings this most special of men to vivid life!!
This film is a fitting tribute to a man who found humility among the stricken, to be the most powerful of his Lord's gifts.
DVD Review: Very inspirational and edifying Summary: 5 StarsThis movie on Blessed Damien is very inspirational and edifying. What I liked most is that they revealed Father Damien to be really "down to earth", that is it makes his holiness "reachable" to the average person, unlike the portrayals of some saints who seem more like angels not touching the ground, rather than human.
Therefore I highly recommend this excellent movie.
Glenn Dallaire
DVD Review: A great man, but an extremely embarassing film Summary: 1 StarsI am well acquainted with the mission of Father Damien and the leper colonies that existed in Hawaii, as I was a Missionary myself at one time. I was really primed to see a good film.Alas, despite the subject matter and star names, as a film,"Molokai" is a real dud,I repeat, a real dud.The acting and the screenplay simply do no justice to such a towering figure as Father Damien.The acting is disastrous as a matter of fact.This film never touched the hem of his garment.Not at all recommended.
DVD Review: Molokai: The Story Of Father Damien Summary: 5 StarsQuite an incredible movie about an incredible man. Anyone wanting to experience one of the greatest tragedys in humanity and try to understand it, this movie will definetly open your eyes. To think that there are actual suvivors of this horrific time and place is amazing enough but when you realize what this man gave up to help the helpless is just pure divinity. He practiced what he preached and went where even the highest order of regligious icons dared not tread to put order, perspective and godly hope in a dying colony of dispare.
Description of Molokai: The Story of Father DamienThis biography of Father Damien, the Catholic priest who in 1873 volunteered for service on the eponymous Hawaiian leper colony, doesn't hesitate to idolize its subject, and why should it? For 15 years Damien ministered almost single-handedly to the quarantined community, supplying what medication he could procure while struggling against the red tape from organizations (religious and governmental) that would rather have forgotten all about the hundreds of people slowly dying in primitive conditions. He won some battles and lost others, finally succumbing to the disease himself in 1888. The film can't overcome the inherent weaknesses of projects such as this: high officials given to improbable speeches recapping the relevant historical events for us, a certain formlessness generated by skipping through the years and only hitting the high points, stock bureaucratic villains whose motives are never fairly explored. On the other hand, screenwriter John Briley has an Oscar on his shelf for Gandhi, so he knows how to string the lessons together and make them go down smoothly. The earnestness of the project no doubt led to the who's-who supporting cast (Sam Neill, Derek Jacobi, Peter O'Toole, Leo McKern) (oh yes, and Kris Kristofferson), but it is David Wenham who must carry the film as Damien, which he does well enough--not spectacularly but with a touching humility not above a tetchy self-righteousness. Director Paul Cox was an inspired choice, however, bringing to the project his patient fascination with emotions at their most subtle and restrained; as a result, Molokai's low-key sense of conflict, often a fatal flaw in similar movies, becomes the film's saving grace, a manifestation of its subject's quiet, persistent faith. --Bruce Reid
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