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Film Discussion

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46 members Created Apr 2026

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On the specific tension in Martin Scorsese's Silence (2016) and why it's the most spiritually serious film he's made.

Silence is a film about two 17th-century Jesuit priests who travel to Japan to find their mentor, who is rumored to have apostatized. The film is based on Shusaku Endo's novel, which Scorsese spent decades trying to adapt.

The film's central question — whether God is silent in the face of human suffering, and what that silence means for faith — is a genuine theological question rather than a cinematic convenience. Scorsese is a believer, and his belief is in dialogue with the film's argument rather than above it.

What makes Silence formally distinct from other Scorsese films is its relationship to violence. In Goodfellas and The Departed, violence is kinetic, stylized, often exhilarating. In Silence, violence is performed slowly, administratively, as bureaucratic coercion. The torture is designed to produce apostasy, not death, which means it can be sustained indefinitely. The formal decision to show this without stylization is the film's moral commitment.

The ending of Silence — which reveals information that the film has been preparing for three hours — is the most genuinely ambiguous thing Scorsese has ever committed to. It allows contradictory readings and earns them all.

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