Stations of the Cross | Telescope Film
Stations of the Cross

Stations of the Cross (Kreuzweg)

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Maria is caught between two worlds: at school, she is a normal 14-year-old girl, and at home she follows her family’s strict Catholicism. Under the teachings of the Society of St. Pius XII, everything that Maria thinks and does is examined before God. And since the Lord is strict, she lives in constant fear of committing some misconduct...

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What are critics saying?

90

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

Newcomer Van Acken is a phenomenal find and she’s never less than believably torn between doing the right thing and being her own person.

80

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

It is all intensely controlled, although this is a drama that goes by the book, in all senses; there are no unabsorbed events to disorder the parable’s secular/religious alignment, and the Greeneian miracle it eventually conjures is arguably a little too pat. Yet it is also strangely moving.

75

RogerEbert.com by Brian Tallerico

Despite that emotional distance, the film is carried by young actress Lea van Acken, forced to really emotionally deliver given the lack of camera tricks some actors use as a crutch.

75

Slant Magazine by Clayton Dillard

Stations of the Cross acknowledges that putting theoretical behaviors and mindsets into practice can have unwieldy consequences if context and intent are wholly ignored.

70

Variety by Jay Weissberg

The fixed gaze of each “station” is an appropriate choice for illustrating unbending dogma, and helmer Brueggemann always makes interesting use of the frame.

70

Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl

The ending's a touch too cute, but the best scenes here stand as potent, empathetic, well-observed broadsides against fundamentalism.

67

The A.V. Club by A.A. Dowd

Formally, Stations Of The Cross is a rigorous achievement; there’s a purity, cinematic if not spiritual, to the way Bru?ggemann carefully composes each static shot, as though they all really were paintings to be arranged in succession along a line of pews. It’s less successful on a dramatic level.

60

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

As Maria crumples before our eyes, many will find Stations of the Cross heartbreaking and infuriating. Others may laugh out loud at her mother, a walking nightmare of pious, punishing rectitude.

60

Time Out London by Trevor Johnston

The film showcases Lea Van Acken’s remarkable central performance and director Dietrich Brüggemann’s adept control of a deliberately rigorous aesthetic.

60

Empire

Lea van Acken is outstanding but Dietrich Brüggemann’s severe gaze invites voyeurism, not empathy. A stony, stifling if fascinating film.

60

Empire by Simon Crook

Lea van Acken is outstanding but Dietrich Brüggemann’s severe gaze invites voyeurism, not empathy. A stony, stifling if fascinating film.