Screened as part of NZIFF 2015

The Club 2015

El club

Directed by Pablo Larraín World

A group of exiled priests find their clandestine existence rudely interrupted in this stunning and dark allegory of the abuses of the Catholic Church from Chilean writer-director Pablo Larraín.

Jul 24

Academy Cinemas

Jul 27

SkyCity Theatre

Chile In Spanish with English subtitles
97 minutes CinemaScope / DCP

Director

Producer

Juan de Dios Larraín

Screenplay

Guillermo Calderón
,
Daniel Villalobos
,
Pablo Larraín

Photography

Sergio Armstrong

Editor

Sebastián Sepúlveda

Production/Costume designer

Estefanía Larraín

With

Alfredo Castro (Father Vidal)
,
Roberto Farías (Sandokan)
,
Antonia Zegers (Mother Mónica)
,
Jaime Vadell (Father Silva)
,
Alejandro Goic (Father Ortega)
,
Alejandro Sieveking (Father Ramírez)
,
Marcelo Alonso (Father García)
,
José Soza (Father Lazcano)
,
Francisco Reyes (Father Alfonso)

Festivals

Berlin 2015

Awards

Grand Jury Prize, Berlin International Film Festival 2015

Elsewhere

In films as different and inventive as Tony Manero and No, Chilean writer-director Pablo Larraín has been singularly successful in framing Chilean subjects in ways that have resonated internationally. In the blackly funny The Club he turns his sights on the Catholic Church and “offers up a morosely comic and deeply sacrilegious portrait of four priests exiled to the outskirts of their faith, where they lead an existence that’s closer to the exploits of the Soprano family than to anything authorized by the Vatican.” — Jordan Mintzer, Hollywood Reporter

“This tart, smart and consistently surprising blend of ultra-serious material and darkly comic execution looks set to catapult Larraín… into the front rank of international arthouse filmmakers…

The Club is a bold and bracing allegory of a church tainted by scandals – most notably pedophile sexual abuse by priests and related cover-ups – and undergoing painful but overdue reform under the current pontiff. Indeed, given His Holiness’ flair for publicity and embrace of modernity, it’s no stretch to imagine the picture becoming compulsory viewing for all bishops across the planet.” — Neil Young, Indiewire