Call & Times

A rewarding look at a nation’s women trying to change ‘The Divine Order’

- By STEPHANIE MERRY

Decades after Danish, Dutch and American women secured the right to vote, Switzerlan­d dragged its feet. It took a referendum in 1971 to change the laws, and the months leading up to that vote are the backdrop of the drama "The Divine Order."

Writer-director Petra Biondina Volpe's movie doesn't follow the Susan B. Anthony types, who fought the patriarchy for years, but zeroes in on a less likely hero: Nora (Marie Leuenberge­r) is a quiet housewife in a tiny village untouched by the countercul­ture movement sweeping the globe.

Nora spends her days cooking, cleaning and taking care of her two sons and vicious father-in-law, who treats her like a servant. She's not exactly fulfilled by this existence, so she considers going back to work part-time, but her husband, Hans (Maximilian Simonische­k), won't hear of it. At first he jokes — sort of — that, if she's bored, he'll just impregnate her again. But eventually he gets serious: The woman's place is in the home, he insists. And besides, it's not up to her; he gets to make those decisions.

That vexing conversati­on isn't her sole impetus for embracing politics, but it's enough to get her started. After stumbling on some activists in a neighborin­g town, Nora goes all in on spreading the word to her neighborin­g housewives. Before you know it, she's chopping off her hair and wearing tight, high-waisted jeans, not to mention collecting a few allies. At first it's just an elderly widow named Vroni (Sibylle Brunner) and an Italian divorcée (Marta Zoffoli), who's a recent transplant. The movie follows a familiar formula, so of course it's going to be an uphill battle. Most of the village tries to turn Nora into a laughingst­ock, and her sons start getting bullied at school, which puts her at a crossroads: To persist or not?

"The Divine Order" is far from a perfect movie. Some of its references are painfully on-the-nose, as when Nora tells her children a story about fish who live at the bottom of the ocean, oblivious to the sunlight above. More jarringly, staunchly misogynist­ic characters change in outlandish ways to ensure a tidy resolution.

But the movie still holds power, mostly thanks to Leuenberge­r's arresting, selfcontai­ned performanc­e as Nora. She plays the character as an enigma, the last person you'd expect to lead a cause. "I didn't think you had it in you," Vroni says after Nora stands up, however meekly, to a bully.

Three stars. Unrated. Contains nudity, frank discussion­s about sex and sexual situations. In German with subtitles. 97 minutes.

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