The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun

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The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun
Directed by Pernille Rose Grønkjær
Produced by Sigrid Dyekjær
Music by Johan Söderqvist
Cinematography Pernille Rose Grønkjær
Editing by Pernille Bech Christensen
Distributed by Koch-Lorber Films
Running time 84 min.
Country Denmark
Language Danish
Official website
IMDb profile

The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun is a 2006 Danish documentary film directed by Pernille Rose Grønkjær.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot Summary

Mr. Jørgen Laursen Vig is owner of a worn down castle situated in the Danish country side. All his life Mr. Vig has dreamed of turning his castle into a Russian orthodox monastery.

After a visit to Russia negotiating with the Russian patriarchate, a delegation of nuns headed by Sister Amvrosija come to Denmark in order to assess whether Mr. Vig's castle is fit to serve as a monastery. The nuns approve the castle, but at the same time they demand extensive repairs to it. When the nuns leave again for Russia, Mr. Vig sets out to do the repairs all by himself.

The following summer sister Amvrosija and the other nuns return and Mr. Vig's dream seems about to come true. The nuns move into the castle, and slowly they take over the daily work and introduce new routines.

Mr. Vig's life changes: all his life he has lived by himself with no women around, now he has to share his home with the strong-willed Sister Amvrosija and her sister nuns. And they demand more and more necessary repairs. As a solution to the problem, the Russian patriarchate offers to pay for all future repairs to the castle, but on the condition that Mr. Vig leaves his castle to them by will.

Mr. Vig has serious doubts: should he leave his castle to the Russian church by will and thus carry out his dream of a monastery? Or should he keep his castle to himself and continue his lonely life as a bachelor? Mr. Vig, who has never known love, is facing many conflicts with the apparently difficult Sister Amvrosija, but she does strangely enough not want to leave him and his castle, even if she will be the last and only nun left.

Today the monastery is run by Nun Amvrosija. The Russian Orthodox priest Hegumen Theofan, Dean of the St. Alexander Nevsky Parish in Copenhagen, often comes to carry out the services. The Russian Patriarchate and the Hesbjerg Foundation are now negotiating the future plans for the monastery, and an agreement is well on its way.

[edit] Awards

Joris Ivens Award
Amersterdam, IDFA 2006

Grand Prix
Chicago International Documentary Festival 2007

Special Mention
CPH Dox Copenhagen Documentary Festival 2006

Charles E. Guggenheim Emerging Artist Award
Durham, Full Frame Documentary Film Festival 2007

Grand Jury Award
Durham, Full Frame Documentary Film Festival 2007

Honorable Mention
São Paulo It's All True Int. Documentary FF 2007

FIPRESCI Award for Best Documentary
Sidney Film Festival 2007

Millennium Award for Best Film
Warsaw, Planete Doc Review 2007

The Kino Magazine Award
Warsaw, Planete Doc Review 2007

Audience Award
Moscow International Film Festival 2007

Best Documentary Nominee
Film Independent Spirit Awards 2008

Outstanding Achievement in International Nonfiction Feature
Cinema Eye Honors 2008

Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking Nominee
Cinema Eye Honors 2008

Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Nominee
Cinema Eye Honors 2008

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun (2006)

[edit] External links