Kicked out of a convent for being too pious (a nun describes her as being a "caricature of religion"), Sokolowski returns to Paris where she is manipulated into carrying out a subway bombing by a group of muslim men.
In recent times, French cinema has split into two distinct cam... read more
Julie Sokolowski,
David Dewaele,
Karl Sarafidis,
Yassine Salim,
Brigitte Mayeux-Clerget
... see more
Hadewijch, a novice nun, shocks the mother superior of her convent with her ecstatic blind faith, and is kicked out of the order. Hadewijch becomes Celine again, a young Parisian girl and daughter of ... read more
Stats: 29 reviews
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Flixster Reviews (29)
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March 3, 2012
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January 3, 2011
In "Hadewijch," Celine(Julie Sokolowski) is a devout young woman studying to be a nun at a convent. Her belief is so strong, she refuses to eat or wear weather appropriate clothing in order to become a martyr. While she may be happy, her course of action is freaking out her sup... read more
Critic Reviews
Should delight Dumont's fans. For others, it will take a bit of getting used to. The effort will prove to be worthwhile. Full Review
It's a beautiful and mysterious work with a rhythm all its own. Full Review
With Hadewijch, [Dumont] endorses something like the Dardenne brothers' rugged, squalid secular humanism, offering the barrier-breaking embrace as vague alternative to Despair, Church, or Capital. Full Review
Dumont suppresses any information that could bring any of his stick-figure characters to life; he seems to be offering lessons about fanaticism, wealth, power, poverty, and politics, but is merely dra... Full Review
An austere, deeply questioning examination of a devout young woman having an intense crisis of faith. Full Review
In the tradition of Carl Dreyer, Robert Bresson and Ingmar Bergman, Hadewijch is about the dilemma of modern spirituality.
Dumont's elliptical movie is as stiff as an over-starched wimple and rather tedious, but like earlier films of his it has something that sticks in the mind like the hook in a fish's mouth. Full Review
The script's central paradox - that dogmatic believers are the most adept at switching allegiance - is arresting. Full Review
Challenging, thought provoking and extraordinarily powerful. Full Review
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