T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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806.1 | | SYSTEM::JOHNSON | Richard Johnson (EDIENG::JOHNSON) DTN: 830 30994 | Tue Apr 18 1995 10:26 | 5 |
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What's it about? It was mentioned to me last week.
Have you seen it Bob?
Richard
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806.2 | | MDNITE::RIVERS | And good bagels float | Tue Apr 18 1995 10:52 | 13 |
| It's about a Catholic priest who has to reconcile his religious beliefs
against such things as homosexuality, celibacy (or rather, not
practicing it), and the seal of the confessional (or whatever it's
called....).
I've seen mixed reviews-- for example, Roger Ebert didn't care for it,
Gene Siskel liked it, Entertainment Weekly liked it (A or B rating), I
forget what the Globe thought.
Cheers,
kim
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806.3 | more than celibacy**** | MAL009::RAGUCCI | | Tue Apr 18 1995 18:05 | 14 |
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Re:1
Richard,
It's suppose to be good. reply.2 gave a fair synopsis
of the reviews. I hope to see it this weekend in town
(Boston). I think it goes deeper than being a gay priest
or celibate. To me it sounds like it depicts a much
more tortureous life.(sp?) I happen to know a gay priest.
and from what I've seen it is real difficult
to live a dual life especially one
that contradicts the other.
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806.4 | Dennis Ahern says... | EPS::RODERICK | The Amazing Colossal Job | Wed May 03 1995 11:58 | 11 |
| Old (and not-so-old) timers will remember Dennis Ahern of Acton, MA.
The Boston Globe published his letter to the editor regarding a quote
by US Presidential candidate Robert Dole that they published. Dennis
wrote along the lines of (I paraphrase):
Bob Dole says that the movie Priest will make people think all Catholic
clergy are gay. If he thinks the public is that stupid, then since
we've seen All the President's Men we must also think all Republican
politicians are criminals.
Lisa
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806.5 | how stupid do they think everyone else is all the time | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Wed May 03 1995 15:11 | 3 |
|
good one! :-)
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806.6 | had no interest myself, but now will check it out... | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Wed May 10 1995 12:12 | 11 |
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I heard from two friends who were very surprised by this movie and
found it to be an incredibly moving and emotional story. They were
surprised because the movie turned out to be not what they expected
from the trailers (which gave them little interest in seeing this one,
but nothing else was playing so they saw it), instead it was a very
involving movie (one of my female friends even said she cried).
They said it was a must-see movie. I hope to see it this weekend...
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806.7 | deeply involving,wonderfully acted,makes for great coffee-talk after | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Fri May 12 1995 13:37 | 148 |
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I saw "Priest" last evening with my SO and a friend of ours. It was a very
powerful and thought-provoking good film. My two companions thought the film
was excellent and agreed together that it was a deep and emotional phenomenal
experience for them, involving their Catholic upbringings in a manner that no
other film had ever done in this way for them before. I felt so too, but at
just one notch less than them it seemed. They gave the film five stars, I'm
not sure where I'd put it yet.
For starters, if you were raised Catholic, I think you should see this film.
The film hit home in many overt ways, but also in some of the incidental
things that happened in the margins of the screen which none the less still
stirred up a flood of old forgotten memories and feelings. For each of us
last night, the film rekindled many of the things we liked and cherished and
loved about the Catholic church, as well as captured many of the things we
each disliked or questioned or hated about the Catholic church as an entity
(the good and bad in its teachings, masses, ceremonial customs, and clergy).
And about the clergy, the film showed a good accurate (to me) composite of
types, in that I saw parts of the various personalities of the local priests
from my own parish as I knew them growing up each displayed somehow by the
characters on the screen.
I'm not sure what to make of all the controversy that surrounded this film.
At times I can see it, and then seconds later I don't. As usual in this
area, the controversy gets blown out of proportion and pushed to its extreme
(usually by people who haven't seen the film), and when you finally see the
film for yourself, your overwhelming reaction is "yeah maybe, but I can't see
anyone getting THAT worked up about this like they did."
To begin with, any of the more sensitive scenes were all handled very
tastefully and respectfully yet still truthfully we each thought. This came
as a surprise to us, it was different from what we were expecting based upon
all the controversy... which had me half expecting a painful "Piss Christ"
utterly disrespectful artistic view of life inside the Catholic church. Any
R-rated film has scenes of far more objection in terms of sex and scantily
clad people than this had [I can imagine if Hollywood produced this we'd see
scantily clad priests from the get-go :-)]. I don't understand the
objections on this ground if the playing fields are equal. I admit some
scenes were purposefully very difficult to watch, as they made you probe and
inspect your feelings on a very deep level. Which to me was the whole point
- and power - of this film (regardless of the outcome of your inner feelings
and findings). Yet they were still tastefully handled. We were the youngest
people there, many were over 50, and at the end most if not all were sitting
in their seats, appreciatively looking toward the film, with tears in their
eyes as they were affected by the emotional ending of the film. No one, even
from this older generation, seemed to be taken aback by the visuals of the
film.
So I don't really understand the controversy from the Catholic Church on
these grounds. However I do understand part of it on another. And I think
the controversy created by the Catholic Church over this film couldn't have
been choreographed any better to deliver the messages of the film any
stronger than it worked out to have been. In this regard the film and
controversy fit together like hand in glove in a powerful combination. The
problem the Catholic Church had with the film is that the film showed priests
as real-life human beings. Not as some supernatural perfect beings who are
completely unaffected by human feelings or emotions or fallibilities or
pitfalls, who are just mysteriously showing up at rectories from some
factory, like a rectory full of Data's from Star Trek. It shatters that
childhood perfect image that nuns aren't real women underneath those asexual
habits but instead are some non-human and above-human showpiece, delivered
perfection-free from the heavens. It shatters the same views of priests as
perfect unaffected individuals with none of their own human feelings and
human needs. Part of the message of the film was how much the church fears
this above all else, the rift between image and actual human reality, and the
real-life controversy just underscores that point all the stronger. One of
the threads I also found interesting was how the whole celibacy ritual came
about in the church, and how at one point it is one of the priest's
suggestion that it had more to do with the church keeping its hands on its
properties rather than them all going to the widowed wives of priests. The
film also gave some insights into the politics and career-move mentality that
afflicts some in the church hierarchy (alas showing the church as a human
organization and not as some heaven sent 'something-different').
The pace of the film felt like, well, like the pace of a church mass to me.
It was slow moving and little uneventful in places, as your mind wandered and
thought of your own things, but then those quiet moments are punctuated by
scenes of intense emotions and happenings. I felt the intent was to
illustrate life at a rectory. You have two men in a quite lonely older
house, not much going on between them, until someone arrives with problems
and throws the priests' emotions and formerly quiet day into an incredible
fray. What was especially poignant was the pain of keeping information heard
in confessional bottled up inside under the vow of secrecy, while you watch
people suffer without being able to help them or say anything to the
authorities to stop it. And then life retreats back to quietness, until a
mass comes around which delivers more excitement and the cycle begins anew.
I feel like I received a real-world glimpse into life inside a rectory and
into the life a priest must lead via this film. You feel as if you were
actually there, living it and suffering through all of the same issues
yourself. I never quite realized just how much of a difficult life it could
be to lead, especially regarding the confessional. The film gave me a
glimpse into a world that was mostly unknown to me, something which gives the
film genre great power I feel, and something for which I am always grateful
when it happens to me.
The acting here was truly excellent throughout. The male lead could convey
pages of writing about his emotional inner-turmoils just by a simple change
or two in the quiet expression on his face. The characters were very
believably delivered. All the actors felt more like English film versions
than artificial Hollywood ones. They each had a ring of true life about them
[ie, these priests didn't have plastic surgery and silicon-enlarged pecs a la
Hollywood :-)].
There was enough humour in the film to keep things moving and fun and not
entirely entrenched in the 'work' department as you sort through your
feelings. If you liked the Meg Ryan orgasm scene, wait until you see the
scene in here, it had the audience screaming with laughter. The Latin
priest's housekeeper was very funny too, I loved her line about what was for
dinner. The crack about Sitting Bull having reservations was pretty funny
too, in a real life "that's so bad" way.
All in all, it was a very powerful film. It brought up many forgotten
internal struggles I had with the religion while growing up, and gave me a
lot of food for thought about things I just let slide off my radar scope
without thinking about them again, starting afresh. It was a very emotional
film as well. The ending scene were forgiveness is given from the one and
only person who could be excused and understood for not giving it, was truly
heart-wrenching. There wasn't a dry eye in the theatre. I'd want to give it
five stars as well, but I expected more political right-wing vs left-wing
dialogue from the controversy. It turns out to be a more British view of
things than American (less of a rush into political infighting and more of a
focus on the social aspects of the issues). It was more simple than I
expected from all the controversy (no long political essays presented on
either side, just the people involved in them), but nevertheless it is still
a powerful thought-provoking film. Another concern is the pacing, but that
had its desired effect too. This deserves five stars, yet somehow I can only
give it four stars (leaving room for another film to go more in-depth into
the political side of things and to give full-length treatises from both
sides of the various arguments). But still, it's an excellent and very
involving film. A definite five stars for audience involvement.
I think the film may have a greater appeal to American Catholics who try to
sort their feelings out over the older-style teachings that come out of the
Vatican than with the die-hard rule-by-rule Vatican Catholics who follow them
without question and who dislike the stereotyped a la carte American
Catholics who chose their own precepts to live by. For us anyway, some the
the priests' battle to get their hands around all of their faith rang true
for the things we and our classmates went through in our childhood. But
either way, the viewing will be thought-provoking from either position.
But in other words, your viewing may vary greatly...
-Erik
PS- we saw this at the new Cinema Internationale in Framingham, boy, what a
complex that place is!! Concession stands serving Taco Bell and Uno's pizza??
Far cry from sticky floors and ju-ju bees. :-)
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806.8 | | WRKSYS::LASKY | | Fri May 12 1995 14:46 | 9 |
| rep .6
Erik,
Thanks for that great review, it's been a long time since anybody
out there in noteland took the time and energy to write a thoughtful
review.
Bart
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806.9 | A+ | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue May 30 1995 14:11 | 40 |
| We saw this last weekend, and agree that it was a very well done,
thought-provoking film. The major plot line is the conflict, as has
been previously stated, of the priest, Father Greg, between his vocation
as a priest, and his just as strong inclination as a "practicing" gay
homosexual. The subplot indeed deals with the problems of being bound
by the seal of the confessional when it deals with an ongoing criminal
situation.
We went to see it mostly because it's set in Liverpool, from where my
husband hails, and we were glad we did, although the parts of Liverpool
shown are the worst parts. It's not a movie you enjoy, the acting is
excellent, and you feel Father Greg's internal torment. There
is some humor, and it is well placed, giving comic-relief where
it's appropriate, while not detracting from the serious nature of the
subject matter. The problems I had with the film are not really film
problems, but with the decisions that the characters made. However,
these are decisions made by people like these everyday, so they were
not in any way artificial, but real-life. More after the FF
I felt that both Father Greg and Father Matthews should have left the
clergy. In one speech, Father Greg agonizes over his failings, saying
that the Church pays them, clothes them, feeds them,and in return all
it asks of them is celibacy. This being true, they should have both
left and become any number of related things, social workers, lay
ministers, etc. but were in fact, both living a lie. In fact, in light
of the subplot issue with the incestuous molestation of the young girl,
and the gay issue, Father Greg should have left the clergy, giving
him more leeway to help the girl. But then, the movie (which could
still have been made) would have taken a very different turn.
Not mind candy, but a film that reminds you of what a powerful vehicle
film making is.
See it.
Marilyn
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806.10 | Greg's conflict | EPS::RODERICK | The Amazing Colossal Job | Tue May 30 1995 15:00 | 15 |
| It indeed was a very good film. More after this:
>I felt that both Father Greg and Father Matthews should have left the
>clergy.
The way I figure it, what both priests did was the equivalent to
having an extramarital affair. You don't necessarily leave the marriage
because of the affair if you and your spouse can work it out. Granted,
we don't know if God can forgive the way a spouse might, but if the
priest felt he could live with himself and truly felt God was forgiving
of what he did, then it's up to him to decide to leave or not.
Lisa
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806.11 | Rebuttal | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue May 30 1995 19:33 | 26 |
| RE the last:
Not to rathole this topic on this, but the issue is not whether God can
forgive or reconcile, but the Church which is arguably a VERY different
animal from God. It is the Church, not God, if you read my note and
remember his words that requires celibacy. God probably doesn't care,
but the Church does, and their contract, if you will, is with it and
not God. A contract cannot be unilaterally broken and still be binding
on the injured party, unless they agree, which is the problem the
Church wrestles with constantly at the risk of losing some (lots?)
of its clergy.
To bring it back to the movie, Greg refused to admit that maybe he
wasn't meant to be a priest. Father Matthews told him to leave and be
with his lover, and he point-blank said no. Here's where I disagree
with him, God (or our interpretation of His will) can want you to serve
Him in several ways, but if he (Greg) couldn't fulfill the one
requirement of one of the ways, there were certainly other avenues
available to him to still feel he was serving God. Same for Matthews
but his was an easier choice; he at least wasn't tortured by his
decision.
Marilyn
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806.12 | Rathole alert | NETRIX::michaud | Iggy Pop | Tue May 30 1995 21:13 | 4 |
| > ... but the Church which is arguably a VERY different animal from God.
Yes, only one of these animals exists, and the other was created
by the first ....
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806.13 | | EPS::RODERICK | The Amazing Colossal Job | Wed May 31 1995 10:10 | 18 |
| re .11
>It is the Church, not God, if you read my note and
>remember his words that requires celibacy. God probably doesn't care,
>but the Church does, and their contract, if you will, is with it and
>not God.
This is the difficulty and why the movie works for me. The movie is
about the difficulty of man's "rules of engagement" with God versus a
man's personal relationship with God.
I never knew that one of the reasons for priests not marrying was
the inheritance rights of a widow and the Catholic church's desire to
keep its property.
Lisa
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806.14 | I agree on that | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed May 31 1995 12:50 | 8 |
| re -1
The movie works for me, too. I just disagree with their decisions, much
like I disagree with many who are struggling with the same issues in
real-life.
Marilyn
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806.15 | the core question: what makes a 'good' priest? | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Thu Jun 01 1995 10:08 | 72 |
| re: .11
I don't want to step into a rathole either, but am curious...
I'm curious whether your being upset over Father Greg's anguished decision to
stay with the Church based upon how good a Catholic and how deeply much a
Catholic he felt he was despite having 'fallen' once and broken one of the
Vatican's many rules, whether that translates to other Catholics for you as
well.
The surveys and polls of American Catholics show that an overwhelming number
of them have used contraceptives, agree abortion should remain legal, etc,
which all clearly break with the most stressed Vatican rules. Should these
Catholics leave the church as you suggest Father Greg should too? If the pews
contain only those Catholics who have never broken any of the Vatican rules,
say even those Americans who have never in their life used a contraceptive
before, the Church would be pretty empty I'd think. More so than it already
is.
I'm curious if you hold some rules above others. For instance, my parish had
priests with severe alcoholism problems (one in particular), who none the
less was an extremely well liked (and good) priest. He was not stripped of
his priesthood by the Church hierarchy. Up until the point were he could no
longer function intelligibly at mass, he still remained the head priest.
After that point, they simply transferred him to another rectory to get some
help, yet always he remained "a Catholic Priest."
Did you consider Father Matthew and Father Greg to be good priests despite
their failings? If their failings remained hidden and non-public, how does
that affect the equation? If they were priests but in another non-Vatican
faith?
The difficult interplay of issues here is what really made the film work for
me. I think this conversation illustrates the power of the film (and film in
general) for me. The discussion afterwards with my friends accounted for
perhaps even half the enjoyment of the film for me.
Since we're sharing our impressions from watching the film... my take on it
is that I felt both Father Matthew and Father Greg (especially) showed many
inherent personal 'inner' traits and abilities that proved them to be
excellent priests to me, that they are in the ideal avocation for their
abilities, performing in their best suited roles, and doing their most
possible good for society in those roles. Not many people could subject
themselves to a life of those sorts of unselfish and all-giving roles. My
advice (strangely enough matches yours) to them personally would be for them
to move to another non-Catholic faith altogether, where they can flourish in
their abilities and get out from under the cloud of some of the more inane,
archaic, man-made and purely institutional Vatican rules. Like everyone
else. There would be no one to turn out the lights if they all left because
of one or two broken Vatican rules. Unfortunately for them personally but
fortunately for the Catholic Church (imo), they feel more Catholic on the
whole than not, and decide to stay with the institution. This anguish and
decision-making is fascinating to watch, a personal struggle to come to grips
with a global man-made institution. I don't think it's healthy for them
personally to stay within the confines and clouded shackles of that
institution, on some level it's sad that they wish to stay. But I can see
where they feel they are at that their core Catholic, and perhaps can also on
some level agree with them that they may be, and so firmly would support them
in their decision to remain Catholic priests. It is where they are best
suited to be. Many other priests (especially young ones) decide differently,
it's surprising the extreme shortage of new younger Catholic priests coming
into the profession hasn't reached the critical stage long before this.
But all in all, this makes for simply fascinating human drama! At the core of
this is the question: what makes a priest? Someone who is celibate but lacks
any and all human interaction skills and understanding or even basic
compassion (like the far-removed-from-people Latin priest), is he? Someone
who has all the most ideal and wished-for qualities in a priest, a
super-star of the profession/avocation, but who did not remain celibate, is
he? Fascinating questions!
-Erik
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806.16 | My answer | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Jun 01 1995 12:55 | 24 |
| Re .16
To answer your question, I am no longer a Catholic precisely because I
disagree with so much that the Church requires or forbids as the case
may be. BUT, and this is the key, I respect the Church enough not to
mock it by staying in it despite my disagreement with so much of its
basic tenets. If a religion is a set of BELIEFS about what God (whoever
s/he may be) wants us to do, this does not change simply because it is
no longer fashionable for these beliefs to be held. That would be
Religion du jour. My personal opinion is that if I can no longer
reconcile my beliefs with that of my religion it's time for us to part.
That a priest, who is after all the main proponent of the Church,
deliberately and continually choose to break the main requirement
posed on them, is hypocrisy of the highest order, after all they are
supposedly God's "workers" on Earth. I am not saying that they cannot
serve God any longer, but when you knowingly break the Church's
commandments you are no longer a Catholic anyway. There are many ways
to serve God, they were simply choosing what what perhaps most
comfortable for them. This last is my opinion, I don't think it was
fully explained why neither just left.
Marilyn
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806.17 | Correction | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Jun 01 1995 17:29 | 7 |
|
Ooops! That last should read, Re .15
Sorry for the confusion.
Marilyn
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