Saturday, June 30, 2018

"Lord, What a Mess!"

FIRST REFORMED
Dir: Paul Schrader
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Amanda Seyfried

"Lord, What a Mess" was never uttered by Ethan Hawke's conflicted pastor as he grapples with his relationship with God when confronted by a future consumed by the irreversible effects of climate change in "First Reformed." But that is what he is thinking throughout this film -- and that is certainly what  I was thinking as I sat through writer-director Paul Schrader's ponderous attempt to call attention to the 21st Century climate crisis.

I sought out this film because of repeated comparisons to Ingmar Bergman's classic "Winter Light" (1963), where a Lutheran pastor questions the existence of God in the face of a suicidal parishioner's (Max Von Sydow) fears of a nuclear holocaust. Aside from the first scene inside a white-washed church, complete with a plain, bespeckled female parishioner (channeling the incomparable Ingrid Thulin) who has a 'thing' for the man of God, that comparison is jettisoned for more of a pale homage to Robert Bresson's "Diary of a Country Priest" (the pastor does indeed keep a diary and is afflicted with a debilitating illness), before it veers inexplicably off course into "Taxi Driver" territory. (!)

Schrader, you may recall, penned that classic film of alienation in the Seventies, so it may be no surprise that he relies on images from his greatest triumph when the story goes off the rails. Here, he attempts to re-imagine Travis Bickel as an alienated Eco-Warrior. As well-intentioned that idea may be, it doesn't make for a believable narrative. And Schrader is no Scorsese.

I will spare you a story synopsis, other than to say First Reformed is the name of the oddly non-denominational church in upstate New York that Hawke's character finds himself presiding over (how he got this gig is never explained). Suffice to say that, as great as Schrader is at story and dialogue, he cannot direct. (Or perhaps Cedric 'the Entertainer' just can't act).  I suppose some scenes are meant to be comic, but I was more inclined to laugh out loud at the preposterous scenes that were intended to be serious.  Don't think by dropping in a few references to Thomas Merton you can convince us you are saying something 'profound.' Give us more credit than that!