IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
In 1971, a young housewife organizes the women of her town to petition for the right to vote.In 1971, a young housewife organizes the women of her town to petition for the right to vote.In 1971, a young housewife organizes the women of her town to petition for the right to vote.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 14 wins & 11 nominations total
Maximilian Simonischek
- Hans
- (as Max Simonischek)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Suffrage just 50 years ago
Year 1689 and a small province of today's Netherlands allowed women farmers to vote in local elections that then followed by Sweden, NJ in USA, New Zealand and many more ...even British india allowed women to vote in early 20th century... but it took years for this neutral, the richest country in the world to recognize women not as just maids, mothers and inferior to men.. although it feels more of a surface level but an insightful account of swiss women suffrage movement in 1971 ..countries like india already had a woman prime minister then...
A great Swiss film on Switzerland and their culture
I saw yesterday (Friday, 15 Dec 2017) in a cinema in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) the Swiss Film "Die Goettliche Ordnung" here named "Mulheres Divinas" (somewhat like "Holly Women", an awkward title for a great film). The film is spoken in Swiss German with subtitles in Portuguese. Once I did live very happily in Switzerland from 1986 to 1992 (a period quite close to the facts presented in the film) and since I even did learn and I actually do speak Swiss German due to my great integration into the Swiss way-of-life, the film touched deeply - really very deeply - my inner feelings (and I am a married man). Perhaps foreigners might not grasp all the subtle details on Switzerland, but the film conveys a lot of information on the country and their culture. "Schampar Guet", as I would say in Swiss German! Highly recommended.
Wonderful, Spot-On Styling
Just saw this film, read a scathing review here, and felt compelled to balance the scales for this great movie.
We loved it! Visually it is 100% on point: the cinematography, costumes, hair, sets, and styling.
The acting was also very strong, and the script solid. Not sure what the negative reviewer watched, but we felt it was a great ensemble cast that achieved many emotional, nuanced moments.
I am drawn to "period pieces" like this and found it to be quite wonderful. I will be recommending it to friends.
Brilliant realisation.
Nothing spectacular. None of the over-the-top lambastadry you'd normally expect of a movie dealing with such a passionate subject. Just the truth. True feelings, true conflicts, true discovery. What could otherwise have been just another "me too" movie was done with such aplomb that it really managed to impress its message into the souls of the viewers.
I wonder now, in retrospect, if women's rights were another (perhaps major) facet of why "the west" was (and in many realms still is) so against socialism - which in its very fundament deems men and women to be equal?
I wonder now, in retrospect, if women's rights were another (perhaps major) facet of why "the west" was (and in many realms still is) so against socialism - which in its very fundament deems men and women to be equal?
No woman ... don't cry
Hopefully this summary line is not missunderstood, but here we go with what I mean, if you're interested -> don't cry, but rather act. As far as women movements go and oppression of women, there are a lot of stories that can be told (unfortunately, but let's hope we move forward and people will look at this and other movies and question a lot of things).
This is just one of them and as one other reviewer wrote, he/she felt reminded about another movement closer to the reviewers heart. Which makes sense and is what the movie aims to do. While the characters in the movie are divided and it may feel like a fight, the movie itself is rather uniting us the viewers. At least those who understand the message of course and don't feel differently. Having said that, the story is really engaging and it moves with an impeccable pace overall. More than decent and well done
This is just one of them and as one other reviewer wrote, he/she felt reminded about another movement closer to the reviewers heart. Which makes sense and is what the movie aims to do. While the characters in the movie are divided and it may feel like a fight, the movie itself is rather uniting us the viewers. At least those who understand the message of course and don't feel differently. Having said that, the story is really engaging and it moves with an impeccable pace overall. More than decent and well done
Did you know
- TriviaSwitzerland's submission to the Foreign Language Film Award of the 90th Annual Academy Awards.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Paroles d'Histoire: Les conquérantes, avec Zoé Kergomard (2020)
- SoundtracksYou Don't Own Me
Written by John Madara (uncredited) and Dave White (uncredited)
Performed by Lesley Gore
- How long is The Divine Order?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
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- Also known as
- İlahi Düzen
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $76,277
- Gross worldwide
- $195,081
- Runtime
- 1h 36m(96 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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