Fig.1 Sister What-A-Waste |
When I saw the description on my DVR, I immediately thought, "OMG is THIS the film that explains that cockatiel photo?!"
Fig.2 OMG HEPBURN AND COCKATIEL I LOVE COCKATIELS |
*SPOILER ALERT*
Audrey doesn't handle any cockatiels.
So barring that little disappointment, I ADORED THIS FILM.
There's something so endlessly intriguing to me about the lives of the uber religious. Sometimes, they're wackos whose ultimate dream is to enslave all of humanity until they all believe in JESUS or ALLAH or L. RON HUBBARD or whatever, but most times, they're quite thoughtful and humanitarian folks who find humbling themselves before God a very rewarding experience. I find reading or watching movies about their lifestyles a very rewarding experience.
For example, this film chronicles how Audrey's character, Sister Luke, is expected to progress through various levels of servitude to her order. The behind-the-altar rituals and lessons are fascinating. I especially loved seeing the everyday duties she had to carry out, such as remaining silent all day, writing down her thoughts in a little notebook, asking for forgiveness in front of a whole room of silently judging nuns, and attending to the patients at the clinic. She couldn't even speak to the patients--she could only nod and smile, lest she'd have to confess her sin to the mother superior. She was required to sleep and dress in a "cell" that consisted of little more than white curtains separating a bed and a washstand.
Fig.3 Mass marriage |
Eventually, she is humbled enough to be assigned to the Congo and she travels there with enthusiasm. When she gets there, she's shown the impoverished local villagers and she truly enjoys meeting them, but then she is disappointed again when she is told that she has to work in the white people hospital. Blargh. White people.
Fig. 4 Co-worker anxiety |
*SPOILER ALERT* When WWII breaks out and her father dies, her superiors tell her to remain neutral. Since she cannot betray her own conscience and do nothing to help the war effort, she leaves the convent, in a both awkward and equally uplifting final scene.
Fig.5 Yet another animal she does not handle in this film |
Figs. 6 & 7 OMG MORE COCKATIELS