Moving, impressionistic, and worth slowing down for.
Into Great Silence (2007)
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Reviews Counted:62
Fresh:55
Rotten:7
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: A meditative, deliberately paced doc capable of absorbing patient viewers into a whole different world.
Theatrical Release:Feb 28, 2007 Limited
Box Office: $295,559
Synopsis: INTO GREAT SILENCE fits neatly into the sub-category of films that need to be experienced rather than just watched. Over 162 minutes director Philip Groening films a group of monks who dwell in the... INTO GREAT SILENCE fits neatly into the sub-category of films that need to be experienced rather than just watched. Over 162 minutes director Philip Groening films a group of monks who dwell in the Carthusian monastery of the Grande Chartreuse in the French Alps. The monks have taken a vow of silence, and live life at such a gentile pace that it took them 13 years to respond to Groening's request to make a film about them. The subjects of Groening's film fill their days with slow and highly repetitive routines, so the director shoots at a suitably slow pace, highlighting simple tasks such as praying, gardening, cooking, and doing laundry. Groening lived with the monks for four months and worked under strict conditions dictated to him by the order; no voiceover, music, or interviews were to be included in the film, and Groening was to be the sole crew member on the shoot. There are a couple of moments when Groening breaks with his modus operandi. He interviews an elderly blind monk, the Gregorian Chants practiced by the order occasionally feature, and the monks stage a snowball fight on one of their weekly breaks from the monastery. But the film is mostly comprised of a long, lonely trip into silence, and will doubtless leave its audience members in a contemplative and restful state of mind once the journey comes to a peaceful end. [More]
Director: Philip Groning
Director: Philip Groning
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Reviews for Into Great Silence
On a philosophical level, Into Great Silence emphasizes the virtues of the ascetic life, returning again and again to the idea of giving away all possessions in order to become a true disciple.
At nearly three hours, this overlong and repetitive film is not for everyone, but patient viewers will find their time well-invested.
[Some] viewers are likely to consider this nearly three-hour, nearly soundless documentary as a chance to catch up on their sleep.
As we vicariously participate in their daily rituals, we find ourselves at the ground level of spiritual worship. It's hard to recall a similar documentary that brings viewers so palpably close to that sacred experience.
Watching Into Great Silence is like running a marathon or reading the dictionary: worthwhile, but you're glad to be done with it.
Into Great Silence is a film of great spiritual intensity and haunting minimalism that enlarges your concepts of movies and of life.
Have I got a movie for you. Into Great Silence is a two-hour-and-40-minute documentary about monks, and it is one of the transporting film experiences of this or any other year.
The silence captured in this documentary may be the most eloquent you'll ever hear.
Gröning's extraordinary new documentary... beautifully bucks the trend of so many recent documentaries.
A challenging but worth-it experience for more reasons than one can actually speak (or write) in words. It's a documentary to be watched over time, with a Carthusian level of contemplation.
Though it likely will not persuade people to join the ranks, experiencing life behind the walls has an undeniable effect. We've been allowed a glimpse of eternity. And who would not be changed by that?
Their silence is full to the brim with incidental sound that functions as both score and narration in this hyper-empathic film.
For two hours and 42 minutes, Into Great Silence offers painterly images of an existence that is, almost literally, too reverent for words.
The film's "great silence" is, like much of monastic life, an ascetic ideal to be pursued, but never attained.
An old, blind monk describes very simply the joy of giving oneself over to God. Gröning finds Him in his filmstock....
Groning then moved into the isolated, centuries-old monastery and for six months, minus crew or artificial light, recorded the monks' daily routine. The result is the seductive documentary Into Great Silence.
Into Great Silence is one of those films -- Martin Scorsese's Kundun is another example -- wherein the spiritual aspiration of the filmmaker informs, and even exalts, the film itself.
There are definitely moments of poetry and sweetness, and it is a notable achievement, years in the making.
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