Gospa
Gospa | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jakov Sedlar |
Written by | Ivan Aralica Paul Gronseth Barry Morrow |
Produced by | Igor Prižmić |
Starring | Martin Sheen Paul Guilfoyle Frank Finlay Morgan Fairchild Michael York Timothy Wheeler Daniela Čolić-Prižmić Anica Tomić Paul Tivers |
Release date |
|
Running time | 125 minutes |
Countries | Croatia United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $4.7 million |
Gospa is a 1995 religious drama starring Martin Sheen and Morgan Fairchild about pilgrimages to a small village in Herzegovina where six school children say the Virgin Mary ("Our Lady", Croatian: Gospa) appeared in 1981 (see Our Lady of Međugorje).
The movie highlights alleged persecutions of Catholic Croats, particularly of the clergy, by the communist authorities of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Martin Sheen plays Franciscan priest Jozo Zovko, who was tried for sedition by the Yugoslav government.[1][2]
Cast
- Martin Sheen as Father Jozo Zovko
- Michael York as Milan Vuković
- Morgan Fairchild as Sister Fabijana Zovko
- Paul Guilfoyle as Miodrag Dobrović
- Ray Girardin as father Zrinko Čuvalo
- Frank Finlay as Monsignor
- Tony Zazula as prosecutor Govanović
- William Hootkins as judge Marulić
- Angelo Santiago as Vlado Palić
- Mustafa Nadarević as major Stović
- Slavko Brankov as 2nd Jail Guard
- Daniela Čolić-Prizmić as French Journalist (as Nela Čolić-Prizmić)
- Anica Tomić as Mirjana Dragičević
Reception
The film won the Golden Gate of Pula (audience award for best film as voted by festival audiences) at the 42nd Pula Film Festival, and Vjesnik award Jelen.[citation needed]
Roger Ebert gave Gospa two stars out of four. He noted the enthusiastic responses by the film's audiences in the United States, but felt that its "impact is religious and political, not cinematic", and that "it really isn't a very good film".[3] In 2014, Croatian TV critic Zrinka Pavlić described it as a "bad film, with bad acting and an almost cartoon-like depiction of the situation it deals with".[4]
Film critic and Catholic priest Peter Malone writes that the film's "strong pro-Croatian perspective seems more propaganda-like than informative" and most of the dialogue is "stilted writing".[5]
References
- ^ Sullivan, Randall (2004). The Miracle Detective. New York: Grove Press. pp. 116–118, 197, 390.
- ^ Holmström, Leif, ed. (2019). Cases of the UNESCO Committee on Conventions and Recommendations: Communications examined under the 104 EX/Decision 3.3 Procedure of the Executive Board (1978-1988). Vol. 2. Leiden; Boston: UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization). p. 537. ISBN 9789004390294.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (February 20, 1996). "Gospa". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
- ^ "Filmski maraton i nova serija najbolje su što HTV nudi". tportal.hr (in Croatian). 7 January 2014. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
- ^ Malone, Peter (2018). Screen Priests: The Depiction of Catholic Priests in Cinema, 1900-2018. ISD LLC. p. 249. ISBN 9781925872927.
External links