..and binding with briars my joys and desires.
In one of my favorite films, Lone Star, Chris Cooper plays what I
think may be The World's Saddest Sheriff. I've finally found a
companion to the film, the 1950 Robert Bresson film Diary of a Country Priest, in which Claude Laydu shows us what inner torment really means as The World's Saddest Priest.
I haven't finished watching the movie yet -- I've been digesting it
slowly, much like the priest with his stomach problems, and his absurdly
bleak self-imposed diet of stale bread and wine. But I've certainly
gotten far enough to feel certain that nothing will ever go this poor
guy's way. He can't even bring himself to pray... although he reasons
that the desire to pray is as good as prayer in God's eyes.is as good as prayer in God's eyes.
Anyway, not much to report. It's a well-made, affecting film... and one
that has done no favors for my own mood, to be perfectly honest. Once
this is over, I think I'll need to pop a couple of Father Ted episodes in the DVD player. As an exorcism, of sorts.
Now there's a priest who isn't cursed by an excess of self-examination.

