 |
Priest by Antonia Bird
Buy this DVD movie at online store in your country
Canada
DVD detailsActor: Cathy Tyson, Lesley Sharp, Linus Roache, Robert Carlyle, Tom Wilkinson Director: Antonia Bird Brand: Disney Cinematographer: Fred Tammes Editor: Susan Spivey Producer: George Faber Producer: Joanna Newbery Producer: Josephine Ward Producer: Mark Shivas Writer: Jimmy McGovern DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround; English (Subtitled) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Letterboxed, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: Letterbox, 1.66:1 Running Time: 98 minutes DVD Release Date: 1999-09-07 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Miramax
DVD Reviews of PriestDVD Review: The Rules of Man Rather Than the Rules of God... Summary: 4 StarsDuring my lifetime, I have seen many religion based stories. Usually while watching I either get bored (if the characters face religion in a wimpy way) or get upset/angry if I am being beaten to death with a Bible. I have never found a story that made me feel comfortable and eager to explore more. The difference to me in this film was the referencing of the two (2) types of "rules" when it comes to religion. The "Rules" based on God's Laws and the "Rules" based on Man's Laws.
Now I clearly see the simplicity of God's Laws and the negative, self-serving, bigoted and unhumanely torturous Laws created by Man. The latter, sometimes under the guise of "poor interpretation" or the Religion Steamroller overtaking people who wish to enjoy religion, but don't want to be herded through their lifes following preposterious, man made rules.
This film has made quite an impression on me (could you tell?).
Linus Roache could get me on my knees in a snap!
DVD Review: Excellent film. Summary: 4 StarsI liked it very much. Very thought provoking. Love scenes were a little too graphic for my tastes, but they were a small part of the film. The rest was really terrific.
DVD Review: Catholic Gays Summary: 5 StarsWe all have deamons to battle. In this film it shows how a Catholic priest deals with his sexual deamons. He has homosexual feelings wich he releases and is found out. he there for is dis barred from the church till the church can deal with it. They then decide after his confession and the fact that he helps a child who's father molested her that sin is sin.
DVD Review: great but sad movie Summary: 4 Starslove the drama on the movie but hate that at the end he didnt do anything about it and it looks like ppl didnt forgive him for what he did
DVD Review: Moving and Uplifitng Summary: 5 Stars"PRIEST"
Moving and Uplifting
Amos Lassen and Cinema Pride
"Priest" is one of the most beautiful movies I have ever seen. Highly underrated and rarely seen, this is a classic film about the nature of intolerance and how understanding can bring people together. But be warned, you need tissues to watch this film. I remember when the movie was released it so riled the Catholic Church that it was banned in many places and somehow it managed to get on the screen for one showing in New Orleans until the Archbishop demanded its closure. Whereas New Orleans is a Roman Catholic city, this was not surprising but slowly bootleg copies made the rounds and may saw it and spoke of it. This is a movie that I cannot recommend highly enough.
"Priest" is the provocative story about the Roman Catholic Church in Liverpool, England. It appears as if it was meant to shock rather than be audience friendly or obsequious to the church. It has a lot to say about the certainty of dogma in the church, celibacy for priests and how to react when told of sexual abuse against a minor. It also deals with homosexuality in the priesthood. At times it seems to be a morality play when we see that a father has committed incest with his daughter but the church is unable to act and the we hear the condemnation of a priest because he has gay sex with a willing adult).
In a larger sense it questions the purpose of the Catholic Church, its dogmatic stand and its spiritual role in the modern world.
The strength of the film rests on its unswerving viewpoint and the challenge that it throws down to the church to confront those issues it has declined to face. The weakness of the film lies in its melodrama and its profiling of characters. Tom Wilkinson in an understated performance as Father Matthew Thomas and the voice of reason is amazing. Likewise the performance of Robert Carlyle as Graham, the gay lover of Father Greg Pilkington (Linus Roache) and the voice of sensual love is brimming with emotion and fine acting. Roache is the center and the focus of the film and he represents what happens when the church comes under attack and is rocked with inner conflicts.
Father Greg comes to a working-class parish and he is uptight and rigid in philosophy lacks humor in his own religious practice and is unable to see beyond the letter of the law. He is also certain that the church has the answers to all problems. When he sees that his superior is having an affair with the housekeeper of the rectory, he looks for an finds a new father figure who does not judge others and preaches about social causes and interprets church doctrine by breaking down definitions of right and wrong. Long and tedious, some of this could have been cut from the movie but it did show the double standard of the church in breaking the vows of celibacy--that a heterosexual priest can be discrete and get away with having a mistress while we learn later that
A homosexual priest cannot enjoy the same pleasure.
Filled with emotional turmoil and loneliness, Father Gregory emerges from the closet, puts on civilian clothing and goes to a gay bar. He meets Graham and spends the night making love to him but does not tell him that he is a priest. Sometime later Graham appears at his church (after having seen him as a priest) in the hopes of keeping the relationship going. About the same time Father Greg hears a confession from a teenaged girl that her father has been molesting her. The girl does not want him to do anything about this and he is trapped by a vow of silence and is unable to get the help that the girl so badly needs. It is at this point that the plotlines come together--two dilemmas confront the priest. But as the film begins to draw to a close Father Greg is the one to be judged as his parish members discover he is gay and he is asked by the bishop to leave his post. Father Greg has found a sense of redemption in his gay experience and he experiences the suffering that others have felt, he becomes more human and learns to love and accept others even if they do not measure up to the expectation of the church.
This film hits us hard as t looks seriously at some of the challenges and problems that face the clergy. The two priests in the film not only have their own inner demons but they also have to deal with the problems of society, the insensitivity of their superiors and the ethical problems of those in their parish.
All hell breaks lose in the film when the mother of the girl finds her being molested by her father and blames Father Greg for not stopping them. At almost the same time a photographer snaps a picture of the father in an uncompromising position in an automobile with Graham and published the photo in the local newspaper. Father Greg attempts suicide but is unsuccessful and is sent away. When Father Matthew finds him, he convinces him to come back to say mass with him.
The closing scene of the film is in the Liverpool church where Father Greg is confronted by an angry and homophobic mob of parishioners. In a split second the anger subsides when a surprising act of grace occurs and with it are swept away the pain and prejudice that preceded it.successful in having the film banned
"Priest" shows that forgiveness is one of the most distinctive marks of Christianity and there is no future for any church that disregards it. Forgiveness clears a space in time in which people can admit their failures and still reach out to each other in love. Further "Priest" states empathically that the church must be a place where variety and openness reign. In a divine milieu, forgiveness is cherished as the antidote to divisiveness and bigotry.
Obviously the heart and message of the church were in the right place, so much so that the Catholic League was successful enough to have the film banned. This is an in your face confrontational film, heavy with emotion and rails against the rigidity of the Roman Catholic Church. It will make you angry but it will uplift you in a way that you will feel so much better because you have seen it.
Description of PriestCritics everywhere declared PRIEST to be one of the best films of the year! The deeply held religious convictions of an idealistic young priest are challenged when he must face extraordinary events within his own congregation. Soon, he is forced to make the impossible choice between keeping the faith and exposing the truth! A gripping and powerful story -- see this unforgettable big-screen hit for yourself! Despite its title, forget about finding this controversial drama on the Vatican's screening list. The film explores a provocative checklist of religious taboos--celibacy, incest, sexual abuse, homosexuality, the debatable secrecy of the confessional--as director Antonia Bird delivers a bold condemnation of what she views as the outdated politics and harmful nature of Catholic doctrine. The story concerns the ideologically strained relationship between two clergymen, the misleading conservative Father Greg (Linus Roache) and his older and more practical colleague, Father Matthew (Tom Wilkinson). Upon arriving at his new Liverpool parish, Greg is shocked to learn that Matthew ignores celibacy and openly sleeps with his black housekeeper. Greg chooses to satisfy his earthly desires in a more secretive way. Sometimes, he likes to lose the cloth, grab a leather jacket, and pick up guys at the local gay pub. He's got other problems as well. While torturing himself with his own moral dilemma, he's hit with another, as during confession a young girl confides that her father is sexually abusing her at home. While this drags out the old "bound by secrecy" clich? of many religious melodramas, Bird uses it to bolster her theme of unwarranted secrecy in the face of faith and social scorn. Ultimately, both the priest and the girl are victims of their own fear, and must find courage to destroy it. Thankfully, Bird's wicked sense of humor keeps the film's tone from slipping into saccharine sentimentality, while Roache's intense performance and a honest, shattering finale rescue the film from swerving too far into shallow TV movie-of-the-week sensationalism. --Dave McCoy
|
 |
Love Actually (Full Screen Edition)Universal Studios; Release date: 2004-04-27; DVDBest price: $6.86Price in other shops: $12.98
Little DorritWarner Brothers; Release date: 2009-04-28; DVDBest price: $29.99Price in other shops: $49.98
Lost in AustenImage Entertainment; Release date: 2009-04-14; DVDBest price: $9.28Price in other shops: $14.98
CranfordWarner Brothers; Release date: 2008-05-20; DVDBest price: $23.59Price in other shops: $34.98
Away We GoUniversal Studios; Release date: 2009-09-29; DVDBest price: $10.94Price in other shops: $19.98
Love Actually [Blu-ray]Universal Studios; Release date: 2009-11-03; DVDBest price: $15.99Price in other shops: $26.98
Sense & Sensibility (Special Edition)THOMPSON,EMMA; Release date: 1999-08-24; DVDBest price: $6.42Price in other shops: $14.94
OnceHANSARD,GLEN; Release date: 2007-12-18; DVDBest price: $6.66Price in other shops: $14.98
ScroogeFINNEY,ALBERT; Release date: 2003-09-23; DVDBest price: $8.21Price in other shops: $14.98
Love Actually (Widescreen Edition)Universal Studios; Release date: 2004-04-27; DVDBest price: $7.41Price in other shops: $12.98
|
The 24th DayGAIAM MEDIA; Release date: 2004-08-31; DVDBest price: $4.56Price in other shops: $9.98
My Beautiful LaundretteTWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT; Release date: 2003-06-03; DVDBest price: $8.34Price in other shops: $14.98
Beautiful ThingSONY PICTURES HOME ENT; Release date: 2003-05-20; DVDBest price: $19.25Price in other shops: $24.96
Gods and MonstersMCKELLEN,IAN; Release date: 2003-06-17; DVDBest price: $8.96Price in other shops: $14.98
The Lost Language of CranesWarner Brothers; Release date: 2007-05-29; DVDBest price: $13.66Price in other shops: $19.98
Longtime CompanionDAVISON,BRUCE; Release date: 2001-01-23; DVDBest price: $7.64Price in other shops: $14.98
TrickWarner Brothers; Release date: 2000-02-08; DVDBest price: $5.49Price in other shops: $24.98
Making LoveONTKEAN,MICHAEL; Release date: 2006-02-07; DVDBest price: $5.26Price in other shops: $9.98
BentBLUTEAU,LOTHAIRE; Release date: 2003-06-03; DVDBest price: $6.23Price in other shops: $14.98
LiliesWolfe; Release date: 1999-11-29; DVDBest price: $7.32Price in other shops: $14.95
|