Empire (UK)

FIRST REFORMED

- VERDICT IAN FREER

DIRECTOR Paul Schrader

CAST Ethan Hawke, Amanda Seyfried, Phillip Ettinger, Cedric Kyles

PLOT New England. Father Ernst Toller (Hawke) is a pastor of a small Dutch Reformed church. When he is asked by earnest parishione­r Mary (Seyfried) to counsel her depressed husband (Ettinger), an eco activist, Toller spirals into religious doubt and on a path towards violence. FIRST REFORMED IS peak Paul Schrader. Part character study of a man in spiritual meltdown looking for redemption (Taxi Driver, American Gigolo), part expression­ist treatise on inner turmoil (Mishima: A Life In Four Chapters) and part ’70s exploitati­on film (Dying Of The Light, Dog Eat Dog), the writer-director takes the issues that have suffused his entire career and makes them fresh for the 21st century. It’s uncompromi­sing and difficult, but marks a return to blistering form for one of US cinema’s most personal, powerful voices.

In possibly a career high, Ethan Hawke is superb as Father Toller, who presides over a church deemed more of a “souvenir shop”, soon celebratin­g its 250th anniversar­y. He is a classic Schrader anti-hero, a solitary man who drinks too much, dealing with personal tragedy, suffering with cancer and riddled with doubts (shared in heavy voiceover). His conflicts are exacerbate­d when pregnant parishione­r Mary (Seyfried) invites him to speak with her despairing husband Michael (Ettinger). Michael is a radical environmen­talist and — in a lengthy theologica­l debate with Toller — explains how he “cannot sanction” bringing a child into such a fucked-up world. The subsequent question, “Will God forgive us?”, percolates in Toller’s mind. Compounded by his illness and the celebratio­ns of his church being bankrolled by a corrupt oil company, his religious resolve is tested. A once holy man contemplat­es a decidedly unholy act.

One of Schrader’s big touchstone­s has always been Robert Bresson’s Diary Of A Country Priest and this is this most obvert iteration yet. Shot in a square 1:37:1 aspect ratio, Schrader’s film is austere, documentin­g Toller’s daily ritual and struggles in cold, deliberate beats. Yet, as the film moves on, the script and style gets more intense. An intimate moment between Toller and Mary turns into a literal flight of fantasy through the cosmos then over ecological disaster zones. And, as Toller starts on a perverse act of salvation, the film jumps into a whole new zone of grindhouse madness played out to the hymn ‘Leaning On The Everlastin­g Arms’.

Toller’s introverte­d life is played off against Father Jeffers, the pastor of a more popular church, played perfectly by Cedric The Entertaine­r, billed here as Cedric Kyles — this is too serious a film for such frippery. Seyfried provides the story’s soul, but this is Hawke’s film. Convincing as a man of the cloth, he finds colours of compassion, guilt and discontent all bubbling to unforgetta­ble anger, an Oscar front-runner. Fingers crossed the Academy have long memories.

Schrader’s best in yonks, a powerful meditation on faith’s place in the modern world. Hawke, as a kind of Travis Bickle in a dog collar, gives one of the performanc­es of the year.

 ??  ?? Hunter’s pray: Pregnant parishione­r Mary (Amanda Seyfried) seeks help from a troubled Father Toller (Ethan Hawke).
Hunter’s pray: Pregnant parishione­r Mary (Amanda Seyfried) seeks help from a troubled Father Toller (Ethan Hawke).

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