Act of the Heart (1970) Poster

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7/10
A Not-So Happily Ever After Love Story.
meddlecore13 June 2021
In Act Of The Heart an intelligent, talented and beautiful young girl named Martha (played by the stunning Genevieve Bujold) moves from Quebec's north shore to Montreal, where she is to work as a the French tutor for the son of a widowed businesswoman.

Her father's farm is failing, so this relieves him of the burden of having to care for her...as she is expected to find work in the city, and help with him his finances, while she is there.

When not tutoring the young boy, she can often be found at the local skating rink, or singing in the church choir...where she has recently been chosen as a soloist by an Augustinian monk who is overseeing an upcoming concert they will be performing in.

This oppourtunity has seeded, within her, dreams of becoming a famous singer, who gets paid for doing what she loves best.

But when she goes to CBC to try and secure an audition...she is told that her only chance, to achieve this goal, is to become a burlesque singer.

This, however, does not jive with her devout philosophies...as she fancies herself a sort of reincarnation of Mary Magdalene, who's meant to have a relationship with Jesus.

As a result of her looks, outgoing personality, and general sense of innocence...every man, boy...and even monk...tends to fall in love with her...or at the very least...become overcome with desire in her presence.

She shrugs off all their advances, though, preferring instead to indulge in her fetishitic fantasies about being close to Christ.

Thus, while working one-on-one, with the father, on her solo for the upcoming performance, she finds herself falling for the man...as she sees him as being close to Jesus, due to his espoused faith and position in the church.

But things take a darker turn, when the boy she tutors dies as the result of a freak hockey accident, and subsequent botched surgery.

This challenges her faith.

So, to fill the void left in her heart, she pledges her love for the man, as he fulfills both her need for a father figure, and her desire to have a close personal relationship with Jesus, himself.

And this culminates with the couple engaging in carnal acts on the pulpit floor.

Now, he is faced with the choice of retaining his vows, or following his heart, and leaving the church, so that he can be with her.

He opts for the latter.

So they move in together...as she follows her dream of becoming a pop singer, and he attempts to become an actor.

Everything seems to be going well for the two fledgling lovers, up until he imposes a lingering sense of religious guilt upon her.

This triggers memories of a passing comment he had once made to her, concerning ritual sacrifice, as offering up a part of something to God via the act of immolation.

Ultimately leading to the films fiery conclusion.

This film seems to have an autobiographical quality pertaining to both Bujold and Almond.

For Bujold had grown up in a convent school, which she so despised, and sought to escape from by any means necessary.

With acting offering her the oppourtunity to free herself from a life of devout religious sacrifice.

While the male figures in the film, all seem to be representative of Almond, himself.

For he had married Bujold when she was in her early 20's, being a decade her senior.

He has specifically written himself into the story as the man at the party with the separatists, who asks Martha if she had ever considered acting.

They would divorce 4 years after this film was released.

So, I guess it was also a bit prophetic.

All in all, this is a sad story about love vs spiritual guilt, that doesn't have one of those happily ever after conclusions, you might expect from such a love story.

But the acting from both Bujold and Sutherland is excellent, and it was lavished with a number of Canadian screen awards, as a result.

Thus securing it a place in the canon of great Canadian cinema.

7 out of 10.
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4/10
Hearts aflame--literally (and unfortunately)
moonspinner5512 June 2017
Initially a gentle portrait of a virginal young farm woman on the north shores of Canada who sings with the church choir and longs to be closer to God; she has toyed with the notion of entering a convent but instead falls in love with a monk, who tells the girl about the primitive practice of self-sacrifice by fire. Writer-director Paul Almond fashioned this tale for then-wife Genevieve Bujold, keeping her busy singing, interacting with the local villagers, working with the children and learning from (and flirting with) Father Donald Sutherland--a relationship which leads her down the wrong path into a religious fervor. Bujold, one of the finest actresses to come from the new wave of foreign personalities to reach Hollywood in the 1960s, responds to the lighter demands of this material with grace (fending off the affections of a lothario while ice-skating, walking forlornly in the snow and catching the snowdrift on her tongue, reading in bed with her glasses on and cutting up the newspaper), but the larger-scaled moments Almond stages for Bujold would be unplayable for any actress. The film is poorly-shot, recorded and edited, a bit monotonous and with a drab production; however, Bujold and Sutherland prove to be an offbeat romantic combination and there are some lovely moments here and there. Almond has higher aspirations, however, then simply observing this troubled woman's life, and the film's third act is a complete and willful self-destruction. ** from ****
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8/10
A young and beautiful Genevieve Bujold falls victim to her own religious convictions
credmond24 November 2003
Warning: Spoilers
This one is really hard to find, so if you've managed to get ahold of it kudos. Donald Sutherland and Genevieve Bujold are absolutely great in this as a young priest and commited choir girl. Paul Almond does a really nice job of easing into their growing and confusing relationship, which really picks up as the narrative unfolds in unlikely ways by the third act.

You really have to watch this whole movie before you form an opinion on it, and if you miss the last shocking 30 seconds then you'll probably have a low opinion of this movie. This one really need to be re-released on DVD (or at least video besides at the National Archives!) so it can get an audience.
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2/10
The heartbeat crawls to a near stop.
mark.waltz29 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Painfully slow and headache inducing in its sound quality, this psychological religious drama is extremely difficult to attempt to get through in a single viewing. The characters played by Genevieve Bujold and Donald Sutherland are dangerously underwritten, playing a young member of her church's chorus and the priest she becomes obsessed with in her attempts to find salvation and peace.

The shrill tones in which Bujold speaks is dangerous to the ears as I found my own ringing in several segments where Bujold talked in little girl tones, often with the chorus (with her singing lead) in the background. There's several different subplots that reveal her decreasing sanity, one a phone conversation she has with her unseen widowed father and another involving a young boy she knows injured in a hockey game. They do nothing to forward the plot which is barely there in the first place.

The snowy Canadian setting is very pretty, but that doesn't make up for the painful structure of the film. Bujold does try, and Sutherland is quite different than anything else I've seen him in, but they are dealing with a subject matter that is trying too hard to be artistic and ends up like huge mess of colors thrown onto a canvas with no real mood outside of the depressing one that the viewer will find themselves in. If you find yourself watching this and attempting to understand it, keep pain relievers handy. You may need more than one.
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