The Holy Girl (La Nina Santa) (15)

26 Jan 2005 in Film

ALLAN HUNTER at the Movies.

IN The Holy Girl (La Nina Santa), the anguish of adolescence is further complicated by the burden of a strict religious upbringing. The second feature from Argentinean director Lucrecia Martel offers an intriguing portrait of a teenage girl’s passage into adulthood.
  
Oppressive, ambiguous and demanding, it has the feel of a half-remembered dream rather than the clarity of a more conventional story. Living in a wintry hotel with her divorced mother, Amalia (Maria Alche) is a typical youngster dealing with all the confusion and emotion of her teenage years. She is also a devout student at her Catholic religious classes.
 
Beguiled by the idea of service and sacrifice, she begins to wonder what role she might play in God’s great plan. A medical conference brings a vast influx of doctors to the hotel. One day, Amalia is standing at a window display when Dr Jano (Carlos Belloso) appears behind her and starts to rub up against her.
  
She decides that this is a sign and that her mission is to save Jano from sin. Her decision is the start of a shifting network of relationships in which the urge to save inadvertently leads to the possibility of destruction.
  
Favouring extreme close-ups and the cramped interiors of the hotel, Martel underlines the claustrophobic nature of a film that is strong on atmosphere but rather less transparent in its meaning. There is certainly an element of satire directed at the middle-classes and the role of religion in Argentinean society but the tone of the tale and a rather abrupt ending mean that this remains a film for arthouse fans rather than mainstream cinemagoers.
  
THE HOLY GIRL
Limited release, selected cinemas
Director: Lucrecia Martel
Writer: Lucrecia Martel
Stars: Maria Alche, Mercedes Moran, Carlos Belloso, Julieta Zylberberg
Certificate: 15
Running time: 106 mins
Country: Argentina
Year: 2004
 

© Allan Hunter, 2005