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'Novitiate'

U.S. Dramatic; 123 minutes.

Questions of faith and devotion are explored with sensitivity and grace in "Novitiate," a quietly moving drama about nuns on the cusp of great change.

It's 1964, just as Pope John XXIII is implementing the reforms of the Vatican II council. One of the last places for those reforms to reach is the Sisters of the Sacred Rose, a cloistered order in the American South. The Mother Superior (Melissa Leo) drags her feet at introducing the changes of Vatican II, which she believes will destroy her order's devotion and faith.

Mother Superior is overseeing a novitiate class, the second step toward the final vows a nun takes. The film follows a group of nuns-in-training, signing on as postulates and into the 18-month ordeal of being a novice.

Writer-director Maggie Betts focuses her story mostly on Cathleen (Margaret Qualley), a late convert to Catholicism, having been raised outside any religion by her single mom (Julianna Nicholson). Cathleen wants to be a nun for what seems to be the purest of reasons: She's in love with God, and wants to be a "bride of Christ." But as she and the other novices discover, through the grueling penance the Mother Superior puts them through, that love may not be enough.

Betts takes time to lay down the daily rhythms of the convent, and nails the details of Catholic life before and after Vatican II. She's also blessed with a strong ensemble cast, including Dianna Agron, Liana Liberato, Rebecca Dayan and especially Qualley — in a star-making role — as sisters on different points on their spiritual journey. (Fun fact: Qualley is second-generation Sundance; her mother, Andie MacDowell, had her breakthrough here in 1989 with "sex, lies and videotape.")

Most of all, Betts takes faith seriously. Her characters may question their faith, but there's never a moment in "Novitiate" where that faith is mocked or denigrated.

– Sean P. Means —

Also showing:

"Novitiate" screens again at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival at the following times and venues:

• Saturday, Jan. 21, noon, The Grand Theatre, Salt Lake City

• Sunday, Jan. 22, 9:30 p.m., Redstone Cinema 1, Park City

• Wednesday, Jan. 25, 8:30 a.m., Prospector Square Theatre, Park City

• Friday, Jan. 27, 9 p.m., Sundance Mountain Resort Screening Room

• Saturday, Jan. 28, 11:30 a.m., The MARC, Park City