Riveting. Captivating. Excellent filmmaking.
Beyond
the Hills (2012)
Alina
and Voichita had grown up together in an orphanage. They had found solace and
comfort in each other’s presence before both of them took different paths in
their life. The film opens with Alina returning to home with the hope of
reuniting with her childhood friend and starting a new life only to find
Voichita leading a completely new life in a monastery with nothing but God at
heart.
What
follows is one riveting on-screen journey that dwells on faith, love, theism,
atheism and over all, human emotions that goes unfathomably deep. Director
Cristian Mungiu’s remarkable work to depict the tumults of emotions of both the
lead characters would be etched on the mind of audiences. The story largely
revolves around how Voichita trying to get Alina a new life like hers in the
monastery and Alina repeatedly and determinedly trying to undermine the value
of god to get Voichita to love her with horrific consequences for her and the
people residing at the monastery.
Many
things are left to be inferred and left to individual interpretations, like it
should be. The complicated relation between the lead characters is one of them.
The love between them was still intact but faith divided them. The film also
depicts the repercussions of faith and religion at its extreme. The screenplay
of the film is excellent as it stresses to address the daily routine lifestyle
at the monastery and how unbridled faith affects the rationale and morality of
the people living there. Subject like this needed to be handled expertly and
boy it was. So many subtle sub-plots like Alina’s brother’s pangs, the
relationship between the priest of the monastery and the nuns are only examples
of the palette of emotions that were drawn on screen.
It’s
largely a women-centric film. So, it asks a lot from the performances of the
two ladies, portraying central characters. Cristina Flutur (Alina) and Cosmina
Stratan (Voichita) – both of them gave stellar performances that helped the
film to consolidate the theme. The support cast, mostly comprised of female
characters, was deft in their performances too. The only significant male
character, ‘The priest’, played by the dependable Valeriu Andriutu, perhaps
acted as the anchor of all the activities between all the female characters.
Another
aspect that demands exceptional praises is the cinematography. The remote
country sides of Romania looked magnificent on screen. Sometimes, I wondered
whether it was possible to pause and stare at those beautiful shots. Some of
the intense scenes in the films were that intense because the way it was shown.
Overall, it is a film that would leave its viewers, atheists and theists alike,
in a profound state of preoccupation.
4.5/5
P.S.
I have noticed that sometimes the intensity of a film gets magnified when they
use no background score at all.
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