Gabriel's Passion (Spanish: La Pasión de Gabriel) is a Colombian feature film released in August 2009 directed by Luis Alberto Restrepo and starring Andrés Parra. It is the story of a passionate young priest, portrayed by Parra, who is assigned to a village in the mountains of Colombia's coffee region during the Colombian conflict.

Gabriel's Passion
Original film poster for "La Pasión de Gabriel"
Directed byLuis Alberto Restrepo
Written byDiego Vásquez
StarringAndrés Parra, María Cecilia Sánchez
CinematographySergio García
Music bySally Station
Release date
  • 25 December 2009 (2009-12-25)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryColombia
LanguageSpanish

Plot

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The film is set during the Colombian conflict. Father Gabriel is a stout and good-natured young priest in a town in the mountains of Colombia's coffee region. Unable to control his passions, Gabriel has a sexual affair with a woman from his parish. He also confronts the violent groups in his town. He has an internal debate between following the orders of the diocese or leaving the priesthood to help his community without the security of the cassock.

The film's other fundamental characters are the school principal and her husband who are described as "masters of empathy."[1]

The film's website noted: "The film demonstrates how fact is stranger than fiction and how ordinary men can be heroes too. Gabriel's Passion questions the vow of chastity and reflects on the human weaknesses of priests. It also reveals how Christian salvation cannot occur without social and ideological liberation, as visible signs of human dignity."[2]

Production

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The production was filmed in the mountains of Santuario and Pereira in the Colombian department of Risaralda.[3]

The film starred Andrés Parra who gained fame three years later for his role as Pablo Escobar in the Colombian television series, Pablo Escobar, The Drug Lord.

The production credits include the following:

  • Luis Alberto Restrepo - director and screenplay
  • Alberto Amaya - producer
  • Sergio Garcia - editor
  • Sergio Garcia Moreno - cinematographer, director of photograph
  • Pierre Heron - editor
  • Carlos Rios - art director
  • Diego Vasquez Moncayo - screenplay

[4]

The film's duration is 86 minutes.[4]

Cast

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  • Andrés Parra, as Father Gabriel
  • María Cecilia Sánchez, as Silvia
  • Jorge Rodríguez, as Alcides
  • Isabel Gaona, as Roaario
  • Diego Vásquez Camayo, as Profe Luna

[4][5]

Reception and awards

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In its first month in Colombian movie theaters, the film was seen by 176,510 viewers, making it one of the most viewed Colombian films of 2009.[6][2]

At the 2009 Guadalajara Film Festival, Andrés Parra won the Mayahuel de Plata award as best actor. The film was also invited to film festivals in Warsaw and Medellin.[2]

In a review in El Epectador, Enrique Posada called it a "beautiful film" and described its protagonist as "one of those guys, deeply committed to life, living every moment to the full. He is a tall, stout, good-natured man who enjoys the air and the water, daring, brave."[1] Posada wrote that the opening sequence, a baptism scene in a mountain stream, is "truly poetic."[1]

In 2016, film critic Jeronimo Rivera-Betancur of El Tiempo rated the film at No. 21 in his list of his favorite Colombian fiction films.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Enrique Posada (June 1, 2012). "Las absurdas muestras cotidianas: La pasión de Gabriel". El Espectador.
  2. ^ a b c "La Pasion de Gabriel Es Invitada Especial en el Festival de Cine de Medellin". La Pasion de Gabriel. Archived from the original on April 6, 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ "Película 'La pasión de Gabriel' se estrena en el Festival de Cine de Guadalajara". El Tiempo. 2009-03-23. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  4. ^ a b c "La Pasion de Gabriel". TCM.com. Retrieved June 8, 2023.
  5. ^ "Andrés Parra es un cura enamorado en "La pasión de Gabriel"". Senal Colombia. February 14, 2022.
  6. ^ "La Pasión de Gabriel se acerca a los 200 mil asistentes". El Colombiano.
  7. ^ "50 películas colombianas que hay que ver". Jeronimo Rivera-Betancur. March 27, 2015.