• About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily
Awards Daily
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • EmmyWatch
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
No Result
View All Result
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • EmmyWatch
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
No Result
View All Result
Awards Daily
No Result
View All Result

Doubt’s Beautiful Ambiguity

Susan Thea Posnock by Susan Thea Posnock
December 1, 2008
in AWARDS CHATTER, BEST PICTURE
0

At a recent SAG screening of Doubt, writer/director John Patrick Shanley said the film‚Äîbased on his Pulitzer Prize-winning play‚Äîis about “the pain and experience of being alive, and that you can’t be certain and yet you have to live.” No doubt about it.

The story takes place in 1964 at Catholic school in the Bronx, where a nun grows suspicious that a charismatic priest has developed an inappropriate relationship with a student.

Beyond the plot machinations of his story, Shanley said the setting‚Äîwhich he experienced first-hand during his youth‚Äîwas about a feeling he had, going back to that time, that the world of that Bronx Catholic school was disappearing. “A real impetus for writing the play was to celebrate and mourn‚ÄîI had a moment of beautiful pain about this world,” he said.

Those of you who are unfamiliar with the source material should stop reading here if you want to be completely spoiler-free.

The crux of the film is that Doubt never reveals whether Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Father Flynn is as guilty as Meryl Streep’s Sister Aloysius presumes. She’s “certain” that his unconventional bond with a young African American student (Joseph Foster) has crossed the line. The audience may not agree with her methods, but it’s easy for us to draw similar conclusions. Yet Hoffman’s non-traditional man of the cloth may be just that‚Äînon-traditional, but not criminal.

Streep’s performance is tightly wound, making the glimpses into her less-than-certain soul revelatory. The actress‚Äîwho appeared at the SAG screening in New York with Shanley and her co-stars‚Äîwas relaxed in person, slyly noting that she “already knew the answer,” to the film’s central mystery when she began the project.

The film plays on assumptions we make and leads us to question them. It got me thinking about how uncertainty isn’t just part of real life; it can make art more interesting. We really can’t know or understand the whole truth, and when we see that reflected on film it resonates deeply.

Viola Davis‚Äîin a small but impressive turn as the student’s mother, Mrs. Muller‚Äîfurther tests our preconceived beliefs. The actress said one of the biggest challenges in playing the role was remembering the restrictions of the 1960s time period the African American character lived in. Mrs. Muller is a woman who knows something terrible may be happening to her son, but is willing to let it happen if it protects him from threats she perceives as even greater (like his being a scapegoat for Father Flynn’s behavior and suffering the wrath of his own father). Rather than her instinct to play it aggressive, Davis said Shanley advised her to remember the character’s etiquette. She said the approach was difficult, but paid off, especially during a remarkable onscreen confrontation with Streep. “To approach it politely gave it a whole different dimension and humanity,” Davis said.

All of the performers‚Äîincluding Amy Adams as the more optimistic but anxious Sister James‚Äîmanage to keep the real themes just below the surface. That’s challenging in a work that’s brilliantly written, but also teeters near the edge of obviousness. It is in maintaining the doubt‚Äîwhile teasing us with the answer to its central mystery‚Äîthat Doubt has power.

In contrast, the French film I’ve Loved You So Long‚Äîan exquisite character study starring Kristin Scott Thomas‚Äîcedes some of its power by offering up an explanation. In the film, Scott Thomas’s character has recently been released after serving more than a decade in prison for a terrible crime. The film follows her adjustment back into the world, and into the lives of her sister (Elsa Zylberstein) and her family. At first I wanted to know her motives, but through the course of the story the “why” became irrelevant. Getting the answer was like receiving a disappointing gift. It’s still a near-great film, but the irony is that it isn’t what’s missing that keeps it from greatness, it’s what’s provided.

Doubt provides a different kind of gift for viewers. One we must open on our own.

Tags: Doubt
Previous Post

Frozen River Wins Big in Stockholm

Next Post

2009 Spirit Award Nominations

Next Post

2009 Spirit Award Nominations

AD Predicts

Oscar Nomination Predictions

See All →
Best Picture
  • 1.
    Hamnet
    95.8%
  • 2.
    One Battle After Another
    95.8%
  • 3.
    Sinners
    91.7%
  • 4.
    Sentimental Value
    95.8%
  • 5.
    Marty Supreme
    95.8%
Best Director
  • 1.
    Paul Thomas Anderson
    One Battle After Another
    100.0%
  • 2.
    Chloe Zhao
    Hamnet
    100.0%
  • 3.
    Ryan Coogler
    Sinners
    70.8%
  • 4.
    Joachim Trier
    Sentimental Value
    70.8%
  • 5.
    Jafar Panahi
    It Was Just An Accident
    54.2%
Best Actor
  • 1.
    Timothée Chalamet
    Marty Supreme
    100.0%
  • 2.
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    One Battle After Another
    95.8%
  • 3.
    Ethan Hawke
    Blue Moon
    75.0%
  • 4.
    Michael B. Jordan
    Sinners
    83.3%
  • 5.
    Wagner Maura
    The Secret Agent
    62.5%
Best Actress
  • 1.
    Jessie Buckley
    Hamnet
    100.0%
  • 2.
    Renate Reinsve
    Sentimental Value
    91.7%
  • 3.
    Cynthia Erivo
    Wicked For Good
    66.7%
  • 4.
    Amanda Seyfried
    The Testament of Ann Lee
    62.5%
  • 5.
    Chase Infiniti
    One Battle After Another
    54.2%
Best Supporting Actor
  • 1.
    Stellan Skarsgård
    Sentimental Value
    95.8%
  • 2.
    Paul Mescal
    Hamnet
    91.7%
  • 3.
    Sean Penn
    One Battle After Another
    87.5%
  • 4.
    Jacob Elordi
    Frankenstein
    79.2%
  • 5.
    Benicio Del Toro
    One Battle After Another
    41.7%
View Full Predictions
Let’s Talk Cinema: The Holiday Kickstart
featured

Let’s Talk Cinema: The Holiday Kickstart

by Jeremy Jentzen
November 26, 2025
40

With my house decorated in all the festive beauty of Christmas, my kids singing their hearts out to every carol,...

Jim Cameron Says Netflix Shouldn’t Qualify for the Oscars. Is he right?

Jim Cameron Says Netflix Shouldn’t Qualify for the Oscars. Is he right?

November 25, 2025
One Battle After Another Dominates the Astras with 11 Nominations

One Battle After Another Dominates the Astras with 11 Nominations

November 25, 2025
Nextgen Oscarwatcher: When Oscar Contenders Underwhelm

Nextgen Oscarwatcher: When Oscar Contenders Underwhelm

November 24, 2025
Critics Choice Shortlists

Critics Choice Shortlists

November 24, 2025
Wicked for Good Breaks Records at the Box Office

Wicked for Good Breaks Records at the Box Office

November 24, 2025
2026 Oscars: How the Academy Can Save Hollywood

2026 Oscars: How the Academy Can Save Hollywood

November 23, 2025

2026 Oscar Predictions: How to Build a Best Picture Contender

November 21, 2025
Oscars 2026 Wicked for Good is Getting Hammered by Critics

Oscars 2026 Wicked for Good is Getting Hammered by Critics

November 21, 2025

Ben Shapiro Trolls the Awards Community With FYC Ad for “Best Podcast”

November 20, 2025

Oscar News

2026 Oscars: Contenders Bringing the Glam to the Governors Awards

2026 Oscars: Contenders Bringing the Glam to the Governors Awards

November 17, 2025

2026 Oscars — Best Director: There is Ryan Coogler and Everyone Else

2026 Oscars: What Five Best Actor Contenders Will Get Nominated? [POLL]

“Politically Charged” One Battle After Another Dazzles Crowds at Early Screenings

2026 Oscars: The Themes That Will Drive This Year’s Best Picture Race

The Buzzmeter: Can Brad Pitt’s and F1 Invite the Public Back to the Oscars?

EmmyWatch

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

July 18, 2025

The Gotham TV Winners Set the Consensus to Come

Gothams Announces Television Nominees

White Lotus Finale – A Deeply Profound Message for a Weary World

  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.