Hail Mary Movie Review
Hail Mary Review
"Hail Mary" Overview

Rating: NR
1985
Cast and Crew
Director : Jean-Luc GodardProducer : Jean-Luc Godard
Screenwiter : Jean-Luc Godard
Starring : Myriem Roussel,Thierry Rode,Philippe Lacoste,Manon Andersen,Malachi Jara Kohan,Juliette Binoche
"Denounced by the Pope" is pretty heavy marketing material, and one look at
Hail Mary's premise can certainly make you see why he'd not take kindly to the
film. Here, the lovely Myriem Roussel is a teenage gas station attendant named
Marie, who becomes inexplicably pregnant despite being a virgin. She marries
her boyfriend Joseph. Eventually she has a son.
Sound familiar? This reimagining of the birth of Jesus is both hauntingly
beautiful and often quite funny, just the sort of surreal experience that is
the hallmark of director Jean-Luc Godard's best work.
But is Hail Mary as offensive as its reputation? Aside from having Marie appear
naked in just about every other scene of the film, not really. In fact, I see
Hail Mary as almost celebratory, offering a far more accessible look at
Christianity than a stuffy period piece or something like The Passion of the
Christ. It certainly doesn't hurt to insert a little humor into Biblical canon,
and Hail Mary's best bits are at the end, after little Jésus is born and he
starts giving his friends new names (something I never really understood the
reasons for from Biblical history). Perhaps the greatest bit is when little
Jésus, seen here as a bit of a petulant brat, runs away from his parents.
"He'll be back," says Joseph. "When?" asks Marie. "Easter."
Godard being Godard, of course, don't expect a tidy narrative to hold this all
together. The film is a haphazard collection of scenes that only loosely come
together as a whole, and many of which feel out of place altogether. (His
conceit for this go-round is a title card that reads (in French) "At that time"
inserted between scenes at random.) As canon, the film is intended to follow
Anne-Marie Miéville's 25-minute The Book of Mary, which prefaces Hail Mary on
this new DVD release and provides equally hazy visions of Marie (different
actress) as a young girl.
Overall though, this is fascinating stuff that is beautifully photographed.
Bonus points for making religion into something fun... and a little bit naughty.
Aka 'Je vous salue, Marie.'
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Review by Christopher Null
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