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Film

The Innocents (also titled as Agnus Dei)

A harrowing test of faith

November 11, 2016 13:04

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

1 min read

Faith is 24 hours of doubt and one minute of hope, claims one of the sisters in Anne Fontaine's (Coco Before Chanel) compelling and powerful French-Polish drama.

Based on real events, The Innocents is set in the bleak, snow-covered landscape of postwar Poland, in December 1945. Much of the film is shot within the cloistered walls of a Benedictine convent, which initially presents as a place of sanctity and serenity.

The film's protagonist, Mathilde (Lou de Laâge), is a young French doctor working with the Red Cross. When a nun runs into a hospital begging for help, Mathilde defies protocol and accompanies her to the convent where she discovers another nun in labour. She soon finds out that several other members of the order are pregnant, all victims of assault by Russian soldiers. "I can still smell their odour," one of the sisters later tells her. Within their fiercely private world, Mathilde becomes their only hope.

Rational, resilient and compassionate, Lou de Laâge shines as Mathilde. Brief love interest comes in the form of her superior, Samuel, a Jewish doctor whose wry comment, "There are a few of us left," is one of the reminders of the subtle shadow of the Holocaust.