In a village in France during the German occupation of World War II, a friendship develops between the new priest and an atheist.In a village in France during the German occupation of World War II, a friendship develops between the new priest and an atheist.In a village in France during the German occupation of World War II, a friendship develops between the new priest and an atheist.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Martin Swabey
- Udo Fleisch, soldat allemand
- (as Martin Georges Swabey)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsVersion of Léon Morin, Priest (1961)
Featured review
"La Confession" is a film based on a famous book "Passionate Heart" which was already made into a famous film "Léon Morin, prêtre" with J. P. Belmondo. I resisted seeing the original to avoid comparing the two, but now that I have seen Le Confession I firmly intend to watch the one with Belmondo.
La Confession is a story about a priest and people that surround him in his little parish. As it is set in WWII France, there is plenty of opportunity for emotional dialogues and events, and this film has plenty of that. The performances were absolutely impeccable - especially the two leads (And I LOVED the little girl!). However, even with all that, many scenes fail to take the full advantage of the drama that unfolds, and we get mere glimpses of what should have been much more powerful scenes, and in the end - film itself.
There are few loose ends and missed opportunities that if done well would have made this into a great film; but as it is, Le Confession is only good, not great.
Still, I enjoyed it, not only for Marine Vacth's and Romain Duris' performance, but also for the scenery, dialogues and story itself.
La Confession is a decent film that could have and should have been a lot better; it missed the mark by ever so little. Luckily, there is also plenty to enjoy here.
La Confession is a story about a priest and people that surround him in his little parish. As it is set in WWII France, there is plenty of opportunity for emotional dialogues and events, and this film has plenty of that. The performances were absolutely impeccable - especially the two leads (And I LOVED the little girl!). However, even with all that, many scenes fail to take the full advantage of the drama that unfolds, and we get mere glimpses of what should have been much more powerful scenes, and in the end - film itself.
There are few loose ends and missed opportunities that if done well would have made this into a great film; but as it is, Le Confession is only good, not great.
Still, I enjoyed it, not only for Marine Vacth's and Romain Duris' performance, but also for the scenery, dialogues and story itself.
La Confession is a decent film that could have and should have been a lot better; it missed the mark by ever so little. Luckily, there is also plenty to enjoy here.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- La confession
- Filming locations
- Aegidium Parvis de Saint-Gilles, Brussels, Belgium(Le bureau de poste)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 56 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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