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The Club(El Club)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Chile · 2015
1h 37m
Director Pablo Larraín
Starring Roberto Farías, Antonia Zegers, Alfredo Castro, Alejandro Goic
Genre Drama

Four retired priests live in a secluded house in a small seaside town. Under the watch of a nun, they live purging themselves of past sins. One day, a new priest arrives; his arrival uncovers disturbing secrets, and creates quite a stir...

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What are critics saying?

91

IndieWire by

The Club is a bold and bracing allegory of a church tainted by scandals.

50

Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl

It's all well acted, especially the interrogations, and its specifics haunt and disturb. But as it aspires to parable it slumps into dark melodrama, with competing scenes of mob violence and individual characters freighted with so much allegoric significance that they stop feeling like people.

50

Slant Magazine by Clayton Dillard

Pablo Larraín's thematic interests shift toward constructing a didactic tongue-lashing against the Catholic Church disguised as speculative fiction.

60

Screen International by Dan Fainaru

One thing missing in Pablo Larrain’s new movie is a touch of Luis Bunuel. Without it, the fierce sarcastic attack he launches against the Catholic Church looks a little too much like a self-motivated settling of accounts, terribly angry and lacking a perspective that would put it all into the right context.

100

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

A bold, blunt, yet clinically intelligent film that provokes as much for its dark humor as for its righteous outrage, it's all at once a gripping thriller, an incendiary social critique and a mordant moral fable.

100

The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer

It’s a surprising and often thought-provoking effort from a filmmaker who has never chosen to take the simple path, confirming Larrain as one of the more genuine talents working in cinema today.

100

Variety by Scott Foundas

Those willing to enter The Club will discover an original and brilliantly acted chamber drama in which Larrain’s fiercely political voice comes through as loud and clear as ever.

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