Bewertungen der Pilgerfahrt - Reviews
Verfasst: 25.04.2017, 13:47
Zum Auftakt ein C+:
http://collider.com/pilgrimage-review/
‘Pilgrimage’ Review: Jon Bernthal and Tom Holland Anchor the Lackluster Epic | Tribeca 2017
by Aubrey Page April 25, 2017
Pilgrimage begins with a stoning. Underneath the hot sun, a religious martyr’s executioners line up and chuck black, volcanic rock towards his head. Each rock lands with a crushing blow as the victim’s skull cracks and blood bubbles to the surface. It’s a brutal beginning – one that tonally syncs the unabashedly dark and gloomy period drama that it precedes – but it’s also a bit of a cinematic warning: abandon all hope ye who enter here.
Set amongst the foggy muck of 13th century Ireland, Pilgrimage follows a group of monks, tasked with transporting an ancient holy heirloom (referred to simply as “the relic”) across a landscape riddled with enemies with a vested interest in stealing it. It’s a lean premise, one that director Brendan Muldowney and writer Jamie Hannigan fill out with curios of ancient Catholicism and colloquial mysticism as the reality of the unforgiving landscape begins to clash with the holy men’s divine plans.
Tom Holland stars as The Novice, a young and altruistic monk whose relatively tame life in and around the monastery is unceremoniously uprooted with a few words from his religious guardians. He’s a necessary presence, one that offers the only real emotional porousness of any of the characters present in Muldowney’s doomed crusade, but perhaps the most interesting presence is Jon Bernthal’s The Mute, who speaks but one word during the entire course of the film. The Mute is an enigmatic force of nature, capable both of extreme violence and incredible sensitivity, and the tension between he and The Novice keeps the film at least slightly emotionally resonant.
At its core, Pilgrimage is a road movie, albeit sans the fun, levity or even the suspense the subgenre has become known for, eschewing moments of capitulated human connection for dark-eyed brooding and sword-clashing. But to its credit, Pilgrimage is certainly more complex than a pulpy approach to the crusades has any right to be, and at its best the film perceptively presses at the grey area between deep-rooted cultural superstition and long-held institutions of religion. And while the film never quite manages to make the soul-stirring connections it seems to be reaching towards, Muldowney and Hannigan refuse to remove religion and all of its occasionally nasty consequences from the equation. Unfortunately, much of Pilgrimage is happy to operate on less interesting terms: it’s uber-violent, and boyishly sadistic as monks and other religious figures knock skull against skull (or worse, end up at the other end of a particularly nasty medieval torture device).
Where the reigning real estate gospel is “location, location, location,” the indie film mantra should be “casting, casting, casting,” and in Pilgrimage’s case, that unspoken mantra is pulled off in spades. Holland and Bernthal manage to elevate the film even amidst the carnage, must have been taken to heart, as the film’s most apparent strengths – stars in Tom Holland, Jon Bernthal and Richard Armitage – remain the elements that set it apart.The best of the film really does come from Holland and Bernthal, who establish a fascinating connection seen only through eye contact, as Bernthal utters but one film throughout the film’s entire running time. But it’s unclear as to why actors of this stature took these roles – there’s little in the action to justify a leap of faith of that nature.
In the end, Pilgrimage is pretty simple: religion for religion’s sake is bad, human connection is good, and the 13th century was fucking brutal. It’s a film for devotees of the genre, who might be pleased by the Crusades-set version of Game of Thrones lite. For others, many coming to Pilgrimage may find themselves bored, even amidst the carnage. It’s neither dumb enough to work as a pulpy period action film, but not quite complex enough to take its place amongst the ranks of classics.
Rating: C+
http://collider.com/pilgrimage-review/
Natürlich spiegelt es sehr stark die Zeit wieder, in der nur allzu schnell mit Streitaxt und Schwert um sich geschlagen wurde, was ja an sich dann eine korrekte Darstellung ist. Dennoch... bei mir war es bei "The Last Kingdom" schon hart an der Schmerzgrenze und das hier scheint noch ein gutes Stück darüber hinaus zu gehen.
Letztlich gibt es in jeder Zeit auf eigene Art und Weise Inhumanität und Grausamkeit, aber sobald man das Mittelalter als Kulisse hat, fallen darstellungstechnisch leider oft alle Schranken.
Vielleicht haben der Film und ich doch noch eine Chance.


