Chris Knipp
11-03-2019, 06:59 PM
JAN KOMASA: CORPUS CHRISTI (2019) AFI FEST
http://www.chrisknipp.com/images/pOz.jpg
BARTOSZ BIELENIA IN CORPUS CHRISTI
Spiritual con
Twenty-year-old Daniel (Bartosz Bielenia) is released from a very rough juvenile detention after experiencing a spiritual transformation and sent to the other side of Poland to work in a sawmill. The chaplain tells him his record bars him from divinity school. But dodging the mill, where he might meet violent colleagues from juvie, he instead dons a clerical collar and introduces himself at the local church. The pastor has to take time off for his health, and Daniel gets to substitute. He has to improvise rituals and liturgy of which his knowledge is sketchy, but his passion swells the congregation and he sets to healing wounds from a vehicular tragedy that has divided the community. Bielenia, who has a God-given talent and a face that's half haggard and half transfigured with serene joy (with something of the young Christopher Walken about it) carries the main weight in a film that sometimes goes on too long but that constantly stimulates thoughts with its mix of deception and beatitude. The somewhat puzzling ending of Mateusz Pacewicz's sreenplay takes us rather back where we started. An engaging third feature(after Suicide Room, Warsaw 44)) from Komasa, who's still under thirty, Corpus Christi is Poland's submission to the Best Foreign Oscar competition. Memorable film, remarkable performance.
Corpus Christi/Boże Ciało, 115 mins., debuted at Venice, nine other festivals. Many awards.
http://www.chrisknipp.com/images/pOz.jpg
BARTOSZ BIELENIA IN CORPUS CHRISTI
Spiritual con
Twenty-year-old Daniel (Bartosz Bielenia) is released from a very rough juvenile detention after experiencing a spiritual transformation and sent to the other side of Poland to work in a sawmill. The chaplain tells him his record bars him from divinity school. But dodging the mill, where he might meet violent colleagues from juvie, he instead dons a clerical collar and introduces himself at the local church. The pastor has to take time off for his health, and Daniel gets to substitute. He has to improvise rituals and liturgy of which his knowledge is sketchy, but his passion swells the congregation and he sets to healing wounds from a vehicular tragedy that has divided the community. Bielenia, who has a God-given talent and a face that's half haggard and half transfigured with serene joy (with something of the young Christopher Walken about it) carries the main weight in a film that sometimes goes on too long but that constantly stimulates thoughts with its mix of deception and beatitude. The somewhat puzzling ending of Mateusz Pacewicz's sreenplay takes us rather back where we started. An engaging third feature(after Suicide Room, Warsaw 44)) from Komasa, who's still under thirty, Corpus Christi is Poland's submission to the Best Foreign Oscar competition. Memorable film, remarkable performance.
Corpus Christi/Boże Ciało, 115 mins., debuted at Venice, nine other festivals. Many awards.