Procession (2021) - Greene
Robert Greene, no stranger to the participatory, process oriented cinematic experiments (Actress, Kate Plays Christine, Bisbee 17'),
presents a powerful documentary about a highly controversial subject -
a rampant child sexual abuse by catholic priests. Procession,
the filmmaker's collaboration with the abuse victims and a drama
therapist, is perhaps the most powerful and impactful documentary I've
ever seen since Act of Killing.
Greene,
who moved to Missouri in 2015, to become Filmmaker-in-Chief for the
Murray Center for Documentary Journalism at the University of Missouri,
saw a news clip in 2018: a news conference of an attorney Rebecca
Randle, who's been overseeing hundreds of abuse cases involving catholic
priests in Kansas City and surrounding area over decades, accompanied
by three victims, accusing many still practicing catholic priests of
sexual abuses, when the victims were altar boys in grade school. This
explosive and emotional news clip was a springboard for Procession, a project three years in the making, which premiered at this year’s Telluride Film Festival.
There's
Tom, Michael, Mike, Joe, Ed and Dan. These participants are there to
reenact the most painful memories of the abuses, to confront and crush
their fears that haunted them most of their adult lives. What's striking
from the very beginning of the film is their immediate strong bonds -
awareness, love and understanding of each other among 6 men who never
knew one another before the project began. For me, it is their kinship,
borne out of collective trauma that is the main takeaway of this
immensely moving film.
There are the green glowing eyes of a priest and mass attending public‘s accusing glances which make the victims feel powerless. There’s the power of coercion in the confessional and the church appointed ‘independent review board’ rejecting claims of abuse from the victim for lacking merits. By reenacting these scenes and playing the roles of each other's abusers, there is a real danger it might backfire and harm the participants, and everyone involved in the project is acutely aware of this. But it’s their commitment toward the project, to honor the victims who lost their lives to suicide, alcohol and drugs after the abuse and to hold those responsible accountable by exposing them in these scenes and to help each other that outweighs the risk.
For many of them, just being
inside of a church is hard. It's in the small things that trigger the
suppressed, painful memories to come to the surface. For some, it's
the smell of incense, the wood varnish on the pews or the chlorine of
the swimming pool, or the color of stained glasses or the dark wood
furnishings that bring up those memories. Gestures, hands in the religious ritual take on the
significance in their suppressed memories too. And they are all put on
the screen. The settings and items that should bring the feelings of
security and comfort, instead, they've become things of nightmares for the
participants.
There's a lot to be said about the
hypocrisy of being 'men of god' and those in power in these pedophile priest cases. It was the sense of
powerlessness as a young boy many victims felt that led to much
undeserved self-blame and shame. By writing their own scenario and
directing their own reenactments, Greene recognizes the
power shift that can be beneficial and even cathartic for those who are
participating. And a lot of catharses and breakthroughs happen before
your eyes in Procession.
You
can't help but being teary eyed watching these grown men who's been
trying to suppress those memories and they manifested terribly into their
lives- recurring nightmares, insomnia, feeling of guilt, shame,
relationship, trust issues and anger. There is also an added context to the
film taking place in Missouri and Wyoming, that this is the epitome of the American
Midwest, where men were taught to be tough.
In Bisbee ’17, Greene involved entire community to participate in reenacting a centenary historical event for understanding and healing. In Procession, tending to only those 6 participants, the emotional impact is much greater with them telling their own intimate experiences. If historical context and taking artistic liberty in portraying the event was necessary in Bisbee, the filmmaker rightfully chooses not to delve too much into participants’ personal lives, but rather zero in on the abuses and its effects in Procession.
Procession
also tells the power of popular narratives. Ed Gavagan, a contractor
from New York, likens the participants including himself as the Avengers,
uniting to fight for justice using the hammer of Thor, in the beginning
of the film. A member of the film crew hands him a sledgehammer to destroy
the set after finishing shooting his reenactment, as he gratefully
accepts it to finish the job- having a breakthrough, in the most literal sense.
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