First Reformed review – Ethan Hawke faces Paul Schrader's spiritual apocalypse | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week

Hawke plays a priest tormented by cancer, alcohol and traumatic memories in Schrader’s ferocious drama

Paul Schrader’s powerful new drama First Reformed is Shaker furniture in movie form – stark, plain, conceived in austere and intelligent good taste; beautifully made, in fact, but maybe more designed for looking at than actually sitting on. It is about a man of God and his personal spiritual ordeal, building inexorably to an apocalyptic climax. Schrader has spoken of being inspired by Pawel Pawłikowski’s Oscar-winning film Ida, but for me it was more as if Ingmar Bergman’s Winter Light had been remade with Travis Bickle in the leading role.

The resemblances here to Schrader’s script for Scorsese’s 1976 classic Taxi Driver are surely deliberate. There is an unforgettably grisly moment when the tormented priest, harrowed by stomach cancer and alcoholism, pours a slug of shocking pink Pepto-Bismol into his whisky; he and we gaze into the yucky gloop unfurling in the booze, very like Travis staring at the Alka-Selzer fizzing in his glass in closeup, while he takes a break from driving his cab around New York’s unwashed streets of sin.

The priest at the centre of First Reformed is the Reverend Ernst Toller (evidently an allusion to the German dramatist who took his own life in exile in 1939), played with unflinching conviction by Ethan Hawke. He is serious, disciplined, shown at first writing by hand in a laceratingly self-critical journal. Toller seems never to be out of ecclesiastical dress and is always sporting a stern side-parting; the sort of haircut he probably had for his first communion. He is a Protestant, like Schrader, and there is some robust joking around on the subject of Martin Luther’s A Mighty Fortress Is Our God, although the preoccupation with guilt, and indeed Toller’s own ascetic image, surely also have something Catholic in them.

Toller is a well-liked priest who comes from a family with strong military and patriotic traditions. He encouraged his son to enlist in the army in the face of objections from his wife, who has now left him. Within six months the boy had been killed in Iraq, in a war Toller now sees as utterly futile and fraudulent. He is now in an unending dark night of the soul, drinking heavily in the evenings in his TV-less and comfortless apartments and urinating in bloody pain, but impeccably conscientious with his tiny but devoted congregation.

Toller has been made the vicar of the beautiful and historic First Reformed Church in upstate New York, but it is clear that this is a sort of sinecure, looking after a tourist attraction, superintended by a much larger church, run by the Reverend Joel Jeffers, very well played by Cedric Kyles, who as a standup comic is better known as Cedric the Entertainer. Toller is the subject of much official worry: Jeffers is notionally responsible for his pastoral care, but looks more irritated than concerned. Toller also goes to a secular therapy group, but his tentative attempts to dissociate Christianity from nationalism earn him a ferocious attack from an alt-right student.

Toller’s anguish is finally triggered by a request from a parishioner, Mary, played by Amanda Seyfried, who wishes Toller to speak to her depressed partner Michael (Philip Ettinger). He is an environmental campaigner who has done jail time for peaceful protest and who is now himself in a crisis due to the fact that Mary is pregnant. Do they have the right to bring a child into a world that humanity has arrogantly despoiled? Something in Michael’s militant passion reawakens something in Toller, especially when he realises that a notorious Big Oil polluter is sponsoring his church.

The sheer Bunyanesque severity of this film is as refreshing as a glass of ice-cold water. It is shot by Alexander Dynan in a palette so restrained it feels almost monochrome, and designed by Grace Yun. Restrained, unadorned compositions are interleaved by sharply candid and unsmiling closeups for dialogue, which in turn are interlaced with stern narrative voiceover. It offsets the moments of emotion: notably Toller’s poignantly innocent and even childlike joy in riding a bicycle for the first time in decades. And there is an extraordinary, hallucinatory scene in which Mary appears to achieve a kind of intimacy with him. It’s a scene that abolishes the gravity of normal realism.

First Reformed is a passionately focused film but not a masterpiece, being flawed as it is by a certain inability to decide on an ending. What emerges is a bit preposterous, and I wondered if Schrader was straining for a note of maturity. But that is the price you pay for such ferocity, and it’s a price worth paying.

Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
First Reformed review – Ethan Hawke finds faith and fury in portrait of a whisky priest
Paul Schrader fans won’t find his new drama a revelation – but Hawke fills the flawed holy man template well

Xan Brooks

30, Aug, 2017 @7:20 PM

Article image
The Canyons review – Paul Schrader's microbudget erotic thriller spits acid

With its rancid atmosphere and scabrous eye on the movies, Paul Schrader's Kickstarter-funded project isn't as bad as reported, writes Peter Bradshaw

Peter Bradshaw

08, May, 2014 @9:20 PM

Article image
Born to Be Blue review – Ethan Hawke channels Chet Baker
In this watchable biopic, the troubled jazz trumpeter makes a tempestuous comeback, embracing drugs, sex, fame – and music

Peter Bradshaw

21, Jul, 2016 @11:09 AM

Article image
First Reformed review – a beautifully told dark night of the soul
Ethan Hawke is masterful as a priest having a crisis of faith

Wendy Ide

15, Jul, 2018 @6:59 AM

Article image
Ethan Hawke and Janeane Garofalo: how we made Reality Bites
‘I kept some vodka in my trailer freezer. It certainly didn’t hurt when it came to dancing My Sharona at the gas station’

Interviews by Chris Wiegand

24, Jul, 2018 @5:00 AM

Article image
Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke: how we made the Before Sunrise trilogy
‘Remembering that much dialogue was torture’

Interviews by Phil Hoad

04, Nov, 2019 @2:58 PM

Article image
Paul Schrader and Willem Dafoe: 'We thought we should really do the nasty'
Schrader and Dafoe – who plays psychotic criminal Mad Dog – discuss the director’s latest film, Dog Eat Dog, a bad-taste epic for the ‘post-rules generation’

Henry Barnes

27, May, 2016 @7:56 AM

Article image
The Last Word review – unbearably cute and condescending
Amanda Seyfried and Shirley MacLaine play a journalist and a cantankerous old woman in a cliched and humourless piece of tosh

Peter Bradshaw

06, Jul, 2017 @5:00 AM

Article image
While We’re Young review – excruciatingly pleasurable mid-life crisis comedy
Noah Baumbach’s portrait of Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts as a middle-aged couple who befriend dazzling twentysomethings would be unbearably sad if it weren’t so funny

Peter Bradshaw

02, Apr, 2015 @2:02 PM

Article image
Ethan Hawke: 'Nothing went the way I thought it would'

A soul-searching fortysomething in the aftermath of divorce – Ethan Hawke's latest role is almost too close to home. There's no big career plan, he tells Tom Shone: he just follows his heart

Tom Shone

08, Feb, 2012 @7:00 PM