There are occasionally films of such extraordinary physical beauty that
they transcend things like plot. Their visual images tell more of a
story than words and actions could ever tell. The images are a series of
moments frozen in time; they are, in a sense, like stepping into a
painting by one of the great masters.

Such a film is "The Mill & The Cross." A collaboration between actress
Charlotte Rampling and Polish filmmaker Lech Majewski, it is allows us
to literally step inside one of the great masters' paintings, in this
case The Way To Calvary, by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.

Bruegel was famous for his subversive visions, and his subtle humor. We
are talking, after all, about the artist who created a painting called
Landscape with the Fall of Icarus in which the only trace of Icarus is
one leg, disappearing into the sea after a flight that has gone
unregarded by everyone else in the painting.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bruegel,_Pieter_de_Oude_-_De_val_van_\
icarus_-_hi_res.jpg
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bruegel,_Pieter_de_Oude_-_De_val_van_\
icarus_-_hi_res.jpg>  )

Similarly, in The Way To Calvary, even if you know the title, it takes
you some time to actually find Christ. He's there, stumbling under the
cross, but largely unregarded amidst all of the other suffering
and...well...just plain life going on all around him. Bruegel's humor in
this painting was to set the crucifixion in 16th century Flanders, where
he lived. Instead of Roman soldiers leading the doomed man to his fate,
it's the Spanish soldiers who ruled the Low Countries at the time, and
with no less an iron fist than the Romans.
(http://static.artbible.info/large/bruegel_kruisdraging.jpg
<http://static.artbible.info/large/bruegel_kruisdraging.jpg>  )

If you're looking for plot, or for character development, or basically
*any* of the things you usually look for in a film, this one might not
be your cuppa tea. There is little dialogue and less plot. There are a
few characters, some played by major actors such as Rutger Hauer as
Bruegel, Michael York as his patron, and Charlotte Rampling as the
Virgin Mary, but it's almost as if each was a "three-dimensionalization"
of the painting and its genesis, not fully-fleshed-out movie characters
per se. And if you're Catholic and looking for the blood and gore and
emotion you associate with the crucifixion itself, or feel-good woo woo
surrounding the cosmic importance of that moment, go rent Mel Gibson's
"The Passion of the Christ" or some other cheezy Biblical epic.

This film is about art, not Christ. It's about how art is conceived of
and executed by those who have the vision to see it in the places they
live in and in the people who live beside them in those places. Who is
to say whether any of the 500 "bit players" in Bruegel's painting were
any less important than Christ or whether their lives had any less
importance in the cosmic scheme of things than his. Certainly not
Breugel, and certainly not Majewski.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzbbYinuTWc
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzbbYinuTWc>


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