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Ends Mon, Apr 7

MISERICORDIA

  • Dir. Alain Guiraudie
  • France
  • 2024
  • 104 min.
  • NR
  • DCP

In French with English subtitles

  • Assistive Listening
  • Subtitled
  • Hearing Loop
MISERICORDIA

The teasingly entwined ambiguities of love and death continue to fascinate Alain Guiraudie (STRANGER BY THE LAKE), who returns with a sharp, sinister, yet slyly funny thriller. Set in an autumnal, woodsy village in his native region of Occitanie, his latest follows the meandering exploits of Jérémie (Félix Kysyl), an out-of-work baker who has drifted back to his hometown after the death of his beloved former boss, a bakery owner. Staying long after the funeral, the seemingly benign Jérémie begins to casually insinuate himself into his mentor’s family, including his kind-hearted widow (Catherine Frot) and venomously angry son (Jean-Baptiste Durand), while making an increasingly surprising — and ultimately beneficial — friendship with an oddly cheerful local priest (Jacques Develay). In Guiraudie’s quietly carnal world, violence and eroticism explode with little anticipation, and criminal behavior can seem like a natural extension of physical desire. The French director is at the top of his game in MISERICORDIA, again upending all genre expectations.

“Eschews the risible Hollywood practice of cross-cutting and is able to generate suspense purely through his mise-en-scène and the actor’s performances. This is rigorous filmmaking of the highest order, controlled and precise to the exclusion of anything extraneous — evidenced by its taut 100-minute runtime” —Ankit Jhunjhunwala, The Playlist

“MISERICORDIA,...between the absurdist gags about sexuality and the sardonic sideswipes at religious hypocrisy, does not follow a fish attempting to swim in unfamiliar waters, nor even an out-of-towner cat set loose amongst the local pigeons. Instead it’s a slippery, changeable parable about a particularly amoral cuckoo looking to feather a new nest.” —Jessica Kiang, Variety

“MISERICORDIA is neither a dirge nor a lofty symposium. Strange as it may be to say for a story that begins with a burial and then shatters after a heinous death, this is a supremely and surprisingly funny film, where humor gradually accrues a subversiveness not unlike desire’s own.” —Leonardo Goi, Film Stage 

“Shot by the talented PORTRAIT OF A LADY ON FIRE cinematographer Claire Mathon, this is a beautiful-looking film, overcast and autumnal; it comes alive at night but limns dusk and dawn as well with a sense of secret possibility…. Guiraudie derives both comedy and tragedy from closeted compulsions and the communal silence in which his characters conceal their enactments.” —Isaac Feldberg, rogerebert.com

The Belcourt Theatre does not provide advisories about subject matter or potential triggering content, as sensitivities vary from person to person. Beyond the synopses, trailers and review links on our website, other sources of information about content and age-appropriateness for specific films can be found on Common Sense Media, IMDb and DoesTheDogDie.com as well as through general internet searches.