STELLET LICHT (2007)

A visually beautiful tale of forbidden love in a Mennonite community in Mexico, from one of the most unusual talents in 21st-century world cinema.
“I was amazed by Silent Light... most of all by Carlos Reygadas’s extraordinarily rich sense of cinema, evident in every frame. A surprising picture, and a very moving one as well.” Martin Scorsese, 2008 Carlos Reygadas’s third film, an austere story of love and faith, is both set among the Mennonites of northern Mexico and performed by many of them. Johan (Cornelio Wall Fehr), a married farmer and father of six, has been having an affair with Marianne (Maria Pankratz) with the tacit knowledge of his wife Esther (Miriam Toews). This precipitates a crisis of faith with mortal and spiritual ramifications, documented in watchful, painstaking takes. Following the lead of masters such as Bresson and Dreyer, Reygadas draws considerable power from the plainness of his inexperienced cast. Their uncoached grace is as affecting in its own way as the long opening and closing shots depicting respectively the dawn and dusk as daily miracles. Silent Light has been compared to Carl Dreyer’s Ordet (1954), also set in an austere religious community. Reygadas first attracted acclaim with his debut Japón (2001).
2007 Mexico, France, Netherlands
Directed by
Carlos Reygadas
Produced by
Jaime Romandía, Carlos Reygadas
Written by
Carlos Reygadas
Featuring
Cornelio Wall, Miriam Toews, Maria Pankratz
Running time
144 minutes