Watching Silence will make you feel terrible — and it should
FOR much of my career as a critic, I’ve written primarily about the ideas in movies and television and how they relate to important issues we’re working out in the world beyond the screen. Over the past few months, though, I’ve found myself drawn to moods — the resolution and courage of Arrival, the capacity for feeling pain and joy simultaneously in La La Land — and to questions films ask that are oriented more towards philosophy than policy.
I doubt that this is a permanent development; my brain is too spiky, and too interested in the relationship of art to politics, for me to turn to a life of placid critical contemplation. Rather, this moment feels to me like a response to political developments that have left me wondering how to be brave without embracing blindness, how to be kind without becoming compromised and how to choose what to do when I am not sure what is right or what is effective.
That last conundrum animates Silence, which I suspect is part of the reason I found myself resisting both Shusaku Endo’s novel and Martin Scorsese’s gorgeous adaptation of the book, which arrives in theatres this weekend.
Silence follows two young Portuguese priests, Rodrigues (Andrew Garfield) and Garrpe (Adam Driver) — I suspect the movie might have been somewhat stronger if those two casting decisions were reversed — who travel to Japan in hopes of finding their mentor, Ferreira (Liam Neeson), who has fallen out of touch and who is rumoured to have apostatised, disgracing himself and the church. With help from Kichijiro (Yosuke Kubozuka), who apostatised to save himself only to see his whole family murdered, Rodrigues and Garrpe begin to minister to a group of secret Christians led by Ichizo (Yoshi Oida) and Mokichi (Shin’ya Tsukamoto).
Eventually, their renewed missionary work comes to the attention of Inoue (Issei Ogata), the inquisitor charged with stamping out Christianity in Japan. Though Inoue began his mission by executing huge numbers of Christian converts, he has decided that it is more effective to damage the credibility of Catholic priests, and he sets out to systematically degrade Rodrigues’ faith.
When Rodrigues leaves Macao for Japan, he is certain that his faith functions as a manual for the right decision to make in any circumstances. When he meets the drunken, damaged Kichijiro, Rodrigues overcomes his distaste and distrust to follow the man. When he meets Japanese Christians, he ministers to them, and when men come from the island of Goto on bleeding feet to beg for his ministry, Rodrigues goes, no matter the personal risk. He squares himself to withstand torture and finds the reports of Ferreira’s fall incomprehensible because he is sure that his spiritual teacher would have chosen martyrdom over apostasy.
But in what Inoue describes as “the swamp of Japan”, Rodrigues finds that this decision tree has been fatally corrupted. The first sign that Japan has changed him comes when Inoue arrives at the little community and tells the villagers to choose between stepping on an image of Christ and offering up hostages to be executed. Without him really being aware of it, Rodrigues’ fondness for his parishioners has gotten in the way. Without thinking, he tells them to apostatise, shocking Garrpe. It turns out that it’s easier to imagine sacrificing yourself for high principle than to ask others to do it.
This is Inoue’s central, cruel insight. He crucifies men in the sea, beheads them in front of Rodrigues and hangs Japanese Christians upside down in pits of excrement. Rather than giving Rodrigues the opportunity for martyrdom the young priest had prepared for, Inoue asks Rodrigues what he would have others do to preserve their own purity, and his. And he and his interpreter (Tadanobu Asano) do so with a smiling malevolence and repeated expressions of concern for Rodrigues’ welfare that only emphasise the ingenious cruelty of their decision not to allow Rodrigues to suffer physical pain.