Cast: Charlie Cox, Wes Bentley, Dougray Scott, Unax Ugalde, Jordi Mollà, and Olga Kurylenko,

Director: Roland Joffe

MPAA Rating: PG 13 for Violence and combat sequences, some language and thematic elements

Genre: Drama, Biography

Running time: 2hrs

Release Date: May 6th, 2011

Distributed by: Samuel Goldwyn Films

 

 

By John Delia

 

The gripping story based on Saint Josemaria Escriva called There Be Dragons opens in theaters and it’s a must see for drama lovers.  It’s a film of Saints and sinners, war and romance that puts its weight on the power to forgive.  I liked the film for the knowledge of the period, the development of characters and direction by writer Roland Joffe.

Wes Bentley as Manolo

The biographical story follows Robert Torres (Dougray Scott), a young journalist writing a story on Josemaria Escriva (Charlie Cox) a Spanish priest about to be canonized as a Saint.  In his investigation of the facts he finds that his estranged father Manolo (Wes Bentley) was associated with Josemaria.  After some soul searching the long separated Robert decides to contact Manolo in a last ditch effort to get at the truth of Josemaria’s past.  During this interaction we see the story flashed back through Manolo, now a dieing man, who harbors a dark secret about his sins and the Saint.

 

The story consumes you from the very start as we meet the young Manolo and Josemaria growing up in the same town.  Both living different kinds of lives of upper class vs. middleclass they find themselves growing apart.  Manolo’s parents push him away from those beneath him until the final separation, one going to the priesthood and the other taking refuge with his family.  When the Spanish Civil War starts to rear it’s ugly head, Joffe’s characters chose sides.

Rodrigo Santoro as Oriol in THERE BE DRAGONS

Joffe (The Killing Fields, Vatel) does a brilliant job with his story intertwining war, politics and religious suffrage.   Making his characters fighters in all facets I felt like I was being dragged between fascism, communism and Christianity.  When he brings the threads of deceit, deception, cruelty and honor together in his finale, the climax puts your mind in a wringer of sorrow and disbelief.  It plays out like a novel you cant put down till the last page is turned.

 

There Be Dragons is rated PG 13 for Violence and combat sequences, some language and thematic elements.

FINAL ANALYSIS:  A thought-provoking drama that torches the screen. (A)

 

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