Apostate

Offers a wry absurdist take on existential crisis without resorting to cliche.

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The Apostate

The latest film by Uruguayan film programmer-turned-director Federico Veiroj – this time shooting in Madrid – THE APOSTATE is a typically wry, bemused, yet sharply perceptive character study. Veiroj’s protagonist, Gonzalo, is an earnest young man struggling with the transition from youth to adulthood, as well as with a complicated relationship with his lovely cousin Pilar. Channeling his confusions and frustrations into a quixotic mission to become an apostate from the Catholic Church (i.e., to formally remove his name from the baptismal records), he finds himself locked in a pitched bureaucratic struggle with that most powerful and unyielding of institutions.

By turns seriously philosophical and irreverently funny, THE APOSTATE is anchored by an extraordinary, deeply satisfying performance from nonprofessional actor Álvaro Ogalla; that Ogalla is playing a version of himself only begins to explain his hilariously deadpan, soulful screen presence. While Veiroj’s tone may be more gently ironic than that of Luis Buñuel (his spiritual forebear), THE APOSTATE nonetheless traces in bracing fashion the competing forces of conformity and rebellion, spiritual yearning and carnal desire, at war within us all.
Not Rated
Genre
Comedy
Runtime
80
Language
Spanish
Director
Federico Veiroj
Cast
Álvaro Ogalla
FEATURED REVIEW
Michael Atkinson, Village Voice

You might have to be Catholic, or better yet a fallen Catholic, to appreciate the whimsical angst of The Apostate, a low-key Spanish comedy as knee-deep in Vatican bureaucracy as The Da Vinci Code. Maybe more so, as the film's central figure, no-visible-means grad student Gonzalo (Álvaro Ogalla) ...

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