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Silence

Play trailer 2:13 Poster for Silence R Released Jan 13, 2017 2h 41m History Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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83% Tomatometer 287 Reviews 70% Popcornmeter 25,000+ Ratings
Two 17th-century Portuguese missionaries, Father Sebastian Rodrigues (Andrew Garfield) and Father Francisco Garupe (Adam Driver), embark on a perilous journey to Japan to find their missing mentor (Liam Neeson). While there, the two men minister to the Christian villagers who worship in secret. If caught by feudal lords or ruling samurai, they must renounce their faith or face a prolonged and agonizing death.
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Critics Consensus

Silence ends Martin Scorsese's decades-long creative quest with a thoughtful, emotionally resonant look at spirituality and human nature that stands among the director's finest works.

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Wenlei Ma News.com.au While it is certainly more like an endurance race than a stroll through the park, there is something redeeming in its cinematic beauty. Rated: 3/5 Feb 15, 2017 Full Review Claudia Puig The Asahi Shimbun GLOBE (Japan) While the craftsmanship is undeniable and the themes of spiritual belief, betrayal and redemption are laudable, the film feels flat and not as emotional or moving as it should be. Rated: 2.5/4 Feb 2, 2017 Full Review Amy Nicholson M온라인카지노추천 Scorsese doesn't glorify martyrdom, and he doesn't even hate the killers. He makes death as blunt and dull and useless as a snapped pencil. The point is that there is no point. Rated: B+ Jan 13, 2017 Full Review Mike Thorn Vague Visages Rodrigues commits to the preservation of his Christianity, refusing to apostatize no matter what the consequences might be. Dec 12, 2023 Full Review Erica Peplin Vague Visages For all its violence and grandiosity, it stands as an impressively filmed indictment against religious persecution. Dec 5, 2023 Full Review Keith Garlington Keith & the Movies “Silence” seeks to be something more – a spiritual epic that not only reflects where Scorsese is in his personal journey but challenges us in ours. Rated: 5/5 Aug 25, 2022 Full Review Read all reviews

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Kevin P A harrowingly tense and devastating deconstruction of martyrdom and missionary work that questions the benefits of conversion in a state that only leads to suffering. The miserable tone is contrasted with such beautiful stunning lighting and landscape vistas. Excellent performances from Andrew Garfield, Adam Driver, and Liam Neeson. The movie has thought provoking themes that question faith vs brutal persecution vs colonialism, and what decisions we make to survive it all. It really sticks with you well after the end credits. Especially with the nuanced portrayal of religious persecution where the torture & murder against one's own people is clearly horrific and evil, but the methods behind it are merely fear from the global European colonial powers trying to carve up the rest of the world and impose their own doctrine by any means necessary. The 3 Portuguese missionary characters may be kindhearted pacifists who genuinely want to spread their faith, but what about their predecessors or institutional colleagues when they first colonized the New World? Or maintained their own purity during the Spanish Inquisition? Their own cowardice to let their followers suffer in a vain attempt to maintain their public image as faithful? Is it worth it? Where do you draw the line? Especially while 2 religious fundamentalist institutions escalate with their brutality to cling to people's faith as if it were a quantifiable resource for power, whether they know it or not. It's a tough watch about the test of faith, but it's such an emotionally powerful film that will stick with you in the years to come. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 04/23/25 Full Review thiago s Filme ruim, o roteiro é fraco, o filme trouxe muitas cenas de dialogo e quase nada de ação e de outro tipo, por praticamente 2 horas e 40 minutos e isso deixou o filme fraco, os personagens são fracos, a história é ruim, e o resto do elenco não ajuda em porra nenhuma, e eu não recomendo esse filme. Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 03/03/25 Full Review Hector I Yesterday I saw Scorsese's film Silence and, strange to say, it's very good but should have been shorter. It follows the story of two Jesuit priests who go to Japan to try to find one of their leaders, who suffered the terrible repression of Christians in Japan in the 17th century after a few years of relative peace following the arrival of the missionaries. This is years after the worst massacres of Japanese converts and priests. Those who remain hide in fear. The two priests arrive in a sublime, savage Japan, very sober and miserable. Japanese inquisitors are on the prowl to flush out the Christians, and we follow the two men as they try to revive hope and find their spiritual master. The hero is taken prisoner, and the Japanese try to make him recant his faith, which he eventually does. Sometimes laborious in its narration, or a little long-winded, it explores an often overlooked facet of faith (denial) and the repression of freedom of thought and belief. At times refined and very cruel, the Japanese inquisitors want to both break and absorb these men of faith, who are overflowing with love for these Japanese who risk everything to believe in God. It makes me want to delve into the history of the Church Fathers and Christian philosophy. The ending is terrible, because despite all his repudiations, Father Rodrigues will never stop believing, his Japanese wife didn't know it, and even his master Fereirra will say “our lord”, even though they were acting as religious customs officers for the Japanese. Kichijiro is a very interesting character, who denies his faith 4 times or more (I stopped counting) to save his life. At first we pity him, but through betrayal (Judas, of course, or maybe stone) we come to hate him. But in the end, he represents our weakness, and therefore our humanity. Just as Father Rodrigues identifies with Jesus when he's imprisoned, he eventually gives in to save lives. A fine film, really! Although a little slow, it's worth a (long) detour! Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/11/25 Full Review Johanna R Horrible torture scenes Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 12/12/24 Full Review John K Historical fiction based a the book of the same name is produced and directed by Martin Scorsese. Scorsese kept to the book and did not deviate too much from the book. It helps us understand what happened to over 400,000 Christians living in one Japanese city over 400 years ago. How Japan resisted and eliminated the infiltration of Christianity and prevented subjugation by the Europeans. The heart wrenching stories of Japnese Chrisitians having to go through the act of fumi-e and survival of the few over the centuries in the underground church is fascinating. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 09/04/24 Full Review Kizza X Soporific. I'd recommend this to anyone suffering from insomnia, it will surely put you to sleep. You also can't get past the fact that Spanish missionaries had no right to impose their own imperialist, corrupt and violent religion upon a country thousands of miles away. Look what they did to the indigenous peoples of south and central America. Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 09/02/24 Full Review Read all reviews
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Movie Info

Synopsis Two 17th-century Portuguese missionaries, Father Sebastian Rodrigues (Andrew Garfield) and Father Francisco Garupe (Adam Driver), embark on a perilous journey to Japan to find their missing mentor (Liam Neeson). While there, the two men minister to the Christian villagers who worship in secret. If caught by feudal lords or ruling samurai, they must renounce their faith or face a prolonged and agonizing death.
Director
Martin Scorsese
Producer
Martin Scorsese, Emma Tillinger Koskoff, Randall Emmett, Barbara De Fina, Gastón Pavlovich, Irwin Winkler, Vittorio Cecchi Gori
Screenwriter
Martin Scorsese, Jay Cocks
Distributor
Paramount Pictures
Production Co
Catchplay, Sikelia, EFO Films, G&G, YLK, Sharpsword Films
Rating
R (Disturbing Violent Content)
Genre
History, Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Jan 13, 2017, Wide
Release Date (Streaming)
Mar 14, 2017
Box Office (Gross USA)
$7.1M
Runtime
2h 41m
Aspect Ratio
Scope (2.35:1)
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