No Greater Love [DVD] [2009] | ![No Greater Love [DVD] [2009]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51fdxY1%2Bk-L._SL160_.jpg) | Studio: Soda Pictures Category: DVD
List Price: £15.99 Buy New: £9.99 as of 9/9/2010 12:09 MDT details You Save: £6.00 (38%)
New (5) Used (2) from £9.99
Seller: Amazon.co.uk Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 2173
Format: Colour, PAL Language: English (Unknown) Rating: Exempt Region: 2 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 100 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6
EAN: 5037899013205 ASIN: B0038KGMC4
Theatrical Release Date: 2009 Release Date: June 28, 2010 Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
A different Notting Hill! August 25, 2010 Taramatie Daniel (London) The area of Notting Hill, in west London, is known as the setting of the 1958 race riots, the annual British Caribbean carnival, and also of that idiotic 1999 romantic comedy starring Hugh Grant. A much lesser known fact about the area, unsurprisingly, is that it is also the location of a Carmelite Monastery situated on Saint Charles Square. The Carmelites, or the Order of the Brothers of Our Lady of Mount Carmel to be more precise, is a Roman Catholic religious order of friars and nuns. The nuns live cloistered, and their main focus in life is contemplative prayer but, as they live in enclosed communities and try to be as self sufficient as possible, they also spend a large amount of their waking hours doing all the necessary work to keep the communities running as smoothly as possible. British filmmaker Michael Whyte, after ten long years of letter exchanges with the nuns of Saint Charles Square, in an attempt to gain permission to make a documentary about their daily routines, was finally granted access to the monastery, and for a year he quietly followed the women as they quietly prayed, cooked, worked and lived, and the footage resulted in the astonishing No Greater Love. For 100 minutes, No Greater Love takes us to a world of Beauty and Love that is unattainable in our lives, precisely because it is a Beauty and a Love that cannot only be attained by those whose main focus in life is to maintain a soul damaging cycle of work and consumption. Michael Whyte's cinematography of these women in their 132 year old building is breathtaking. It clearly evokes, as Kazuo Ichiguro said, the old Dutch masters, in its extraordinary chiaroscuro compositions of skin, wood and glass. Allow yourself an hour and forty minutes with White's masterpiece, and you'll understand why these women chose this Way, and peraphs you will manage to take some of its spirit with you.
Contempletive competition August 19, 2010 A. J. Russell-pattison (Manchester. U.K.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This film of the enclosed life of a discalsed Carmelite convent is inevitably going to be compared with "Into Great Silence" a recent film about Carthusian monks. This is perhaps a shame as the two Orders are different in many ways. Both films are filmed with great beauty. The Carthusian one is almost entirly pictorial in the main film with interviews as "extra's". In "No Greater Love", the interviews with the Sisters intersperse the film and it was these that I found most moving and informative rather than some of the rather predictable shots of Nuns "doing things" (Nuns dancing to a celtic jig grated a little as being predictable). In this film the death of one of the Sisters occurs, the images in this section are very moving indeed. Like the rash of Religious singing (The Priests, The pope CD etc) I suspect this will give rise to other films and may creat a genre' of it's own. I am not sure how I would feel about that, you can have too much of a holy thing!
Chastity, Poverty, Solitude and a Life of Prayer. August 16, 2010 Bob Salter (Wiltshire, England) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
A documentary of nearly 1 hour 45 minutes that follows the lives of an order of devout nuns in a monastery, does not sound the most exciting of things to watch. Not exactly "Gone With the Wind" or "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade", films incidentally that the nuns will never see in their TV-less surroundings. But I was in for a pleasant surprise! The documentary certainly proves to be entertaining, but in a more thoughtful way. The director Michael Whyte apparently spent ten years corresponding with the Most Holy Trinity monastery, in London's Notting Hill, home to the Discalced Order of Carmelite Nuns, before he was allowed in with the cameras. Whyte seems to be following in the footsteps of Philip Groning the director of "Into Great Silence", who had to wait 16 years before he was allowed to film the Carthusian monks inside the Grande Chartreuse monastery. In that film there is no narration whatsoever, unlike this film which is interspersed with short interviews with the monks.
In the film we watch the prayerful and devoted lives of the nuns in some detail. In their interviews it is apparent that they are very human, literate and good humoured. It is also crystal clear early on, that such a life of devotion would suit very few. The vows they solemnly take demand chastity, poverty and a life spent in solitude and prayer. Jesus speaking about it being "easier for a rich nan to go through the eye of a needle than to enter heaven", springs to mind. One nun talks about how she was made to finish her degree course at Cambridge, before her father would allow her into the monastery. Her father probably had some other career in mind for his bright daughter, but she received a much higher calling! We also see such scenes as nuns polishing a shining wooden floor, and wielding chainsaws in the garden. No matter what they are doing the habits remain on! The monastery has a wonderful look of austere cleanliness, which speaks of much hard work. Of course much time is spent in prayer and worship. The nuns have some very gifted singers amongst their number, and the singing is quite lovely. But it is not all work and prayer, as we see them dancing joyously together. Clearly the life does not mean you cannot have some innocent fun together.
The more of this documentary you watch, the more you realise how contented the nuns are with their lives. Some interesting questions are put to the nuns, one lead question being "Do you fear death". The answer is a thoughtfully answered no, and you believe her! These days the nuns do not have to fear rampaging Vikings, but there is something perhaps more dangerous and insidious that lurks just outside the monasteries cloistered walls. The monastery is in busy Notting Hill, in the pandemonium of London, where the destructive temptations of the modern world lurk in wait for the unwary. Not the best place one would think for a life of prayerful devotion and contemplation! The nuns are realistic that they cannot cut out the modern world altogether, but must make some concessions. It was interesting to see one nun doing some internet food shopping. I wonder if they ever go on Amazon? They seem to have a faith that allows them to embrace healthy new ideas, but not fall victim to the more sinister. The interviews reminded me much of those of the elderly Ardennes farmers in "Modern Life", in their naturalness and honesty. The filming seems to have been made using what natural light was available, so allowances should be made for the picture quality. I believe "Into Great Silence" was filmed in the same way! Film lighting would probably not have been conducive to worship! This is a fascinating documentary that gives you an insight into lives that are not so dull as we might imagine. There are a number of interesting extras, including further interviews. A thought provoking experience.
A film to make you think, and beautifully filmed. August 10, 2010 Elsie Cooper 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is very much on the lines of the film shown in cinemas a couple of years back "The Great Silence" but this time it concerns enclosed nuns instead of priests and frank I found it much easier to watch. There is a LOT of silence but the short interviews with the Carmelite sisters are beautifully done and their country dancing at recreation time is fantastic. And don't miss "Sister Luke's Party Piece" among the extras.
Great film July 23, 2010 David Jose Santos Mejia 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I agree with previous reviewers on the general quality and atmosphere of this film. The sound is not very good though, particularly when the director of the film interviews the nuns and the priest. The extra material is remarkable also in its quality.
A nice window to a world full of silence and praying.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
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