Maria Hofstätter in Paradise: Faith |
Ulrich Seidl's intermittently fascinating, intermittently shocking, and even sometimes tedious Paradise: Faith is the middle film in his Paradise trilogy. It focuses on Anna Maria, the sister of the central character in Paradise: Love (2012) and the aunt of the teenager in Paradise: Hope (2013). Anna Maria is a religious zealot, who totes around a statue of the Virgin Mary while making door-to-door calls on strangers whom she persuades (sometimes) to pray with her. Her home is meticulously clean and adorned only with crucifixes, before which she prays and sometimes flagellates herself -- and with one of which she performs a sexual act. Before long, we discover that she's married to a Muslim, though we never quite find out how that happened. Seidl's distancing from his characters allows us a lot of latitude in judging them, so the film is as much a provocation -- an opportunity for us to assess our responses to such religious extremism -- as it is a portrait of faith.
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