Murder and
religion become entwined in Absolution,
a dark mystery/thriller penned by the noted English playwright Anthony
Shaffter, whose other film projects include the revered Sleuth (1972) and the notorious The
Wicker Man (1973). While Absolution
does not rise to the heights of those pictures, it is nonetheless a brisk piece
filled with creepy implications about the capacity young people have to commit
physical and psychological violence. The inevitable twist ending might strike
some viewers as a bit of a stretch, and, indeed, the final scene—which features
an Agatha Christie-style explanation for various mysterious events—is
laborious. Nonetheless, artful dialogue, meticulous characterizations, and the
presence of the great Richard Burton in the starring role make Absolution quite worthwhile.
Burton,
looking much the worse for wear after years of alcoholism and phoned-in
performances, stars as Father Goddard, a strict teacher at a Catholic school in
England. Shaky in his faith and weary from too many years on the job, Goddard
plays favorites, heaping praise on standout student Stanfield (Dominic Guard)
and incessently belittling handicapped nerd Dyson (Dai Bradley). However, when
a motorcycle-riding hippie named Blakey (Billy Connolly) sets up a campsite in
the woods near the school, it’s Stanfield who defies Goddard by befriending the
charming stranger. Realizing that he’s misjudged Stanfield rattles Goddard, and
then things get truly grim—Stanfield tells Goddard, during confession, that he’s
killed Blakey. Worse, Stanfield torments Goddard based on the rule that Goddard
cannot reveal anything shared in confession. The situation spirals from there,
with Goddard’s sanity becoming as endangered as the lives of the other students
whom Stanfield threatens.
Shaffer apparently wrote Absolution as a play first, though the ingenious premise
(confession as a cover for murder) works well cinematically given Shaffer’s use
of indoor and outdoor locations to represent different worlds pulled into
conflict with each other. Naturally, the dialogue is quite sharp, though
Shaffer’s wordplay perpetually teeters on the line between clever and
pretentious.(At one point, Goddard derides Blakey by saying, “Freedom’s a
banner the unscrupulous frequently march under.”) Yet the lofty language suits
the milieu, and the actors all render words so skillfully that the high-minded
approach works. Further, director Anthony Page and his collaborators create an
ominous mood with shadowy cinematography, the efficacy of which is maximized by
Stanley Myers’ excellent suspense score. Plus, as do all good thrillers, Absolution creates a disturbing sense of
inevitability, with each dark turn of the story signaling a deeper descent into
oblivion.
FYI, business complications prevented Absolution from reaching the U.S. until the late ’80s, when it was
unceremoniously dumped on the public like a straight-to-video cheapie.
Absolution: GROOVY
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