Here are some of the bold, daring – and probably true – things you’ll learn from Agora. That the ancient Christians (the setting is
The film isn’t specifically anti-Christian, though Spanish director Alejandro Amenabar clearly has issues with his country’s traditional Catholicism (his previous film was The Sea Inside, a Message Movie lobbying for the right to die, which of course the Church opposes). Agora is more about Knowledge, the human urge to understand heavenly forces – and Amenabar’s main problem with religion seems to be the way it stifles that urge by imposing simple explanations, beating down dissent with lines like “By what authority do you criticise the work of God?”. Our heroine is Hypatia (Rachel Weisz), a teacher and astronomer, burning with the need to figure out the heavens. Does the Earth revolve around the Sun, or vice versa? If the former, why is the Sun sometimes closer and sometimes further away? If the Earth is moving, why can’t we feel it? All this at a time when nothing’s really known. “The universe is a gigantic chest,” reckons an ordinary Christian – and his theory is as valid as anybody else’s.
Amenabar punctuates the film with frequent overhead shots – God-shots, you might say – looking down on the action, as if to show the cosmos hovering above the puny affairs of men, gazing down on their intrigues and massacres. Agora’s great achievement may be in bringing to life a world ruled by ignorance. It really makes you think about our modern world, and how much it’s anchored by knowledge – because people will believe any theory, and commit any atrocity, when they literally don’t know any better. “God wants us doing what we do,” says a Parabalani thug, and who’s to say He doesn’t?
What the film doesn’t do is create a compelling story to house its compelling ideas. Hypatia herself is potentially fascinating, a dynamic woman who’s allowed to teach (because her father is in charge of the Library) but clearly hates being a woman. Courted by the handsome Orestes (Oscar Isaac), she presents him with a frankly grotesque gift – a cloth stained with her menstrual blood, so he can meditate on her own “circles” and see how “little harmony or beauty” they contain compared to the heavenly ones! Unfortunately, Amenabar doesn’t really develop this strain of self-loathing, making Hypatia too much of a heroine, and her two suitors – Orestes and Davus (Max Minghella), a slave turned Christian – are weakly written.
Agora is a sophisticated film, but not a very good one. The dialogue isn’t tin-eared – as so often in these English-speaking Euro-movies – but it’s not too memorable either (though Michael Lonsdale as Hypatia’s dad gets a poignant moment when he knows he’s dying and asks his daughter: “Promise me, when I’m gone, that you won’t remember this foolish old man”). Despite the pyrotechnics, you’re always conscious that it’s all taking place on one big set (shot in
Almost a year after premiering at