Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun
Original title: Die Liebesbriefe einer portugiesischen Nonne
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
1.3K
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16-year-old Maria is forced into Serra D'Aires convent, secretly run by Satanists.16-year-old Maria is forced into Serra D'Aires convent, secretly run by Satanists.16-year-old Maria is forced into Serra D'Aires convent, secretly run by Satanists.
Aida Vargas
- Joanna, a Nun
- (as Aida Kargas)
Vítor Mendes
- António Fernando Queiroz de Melo, the Mayor
- (as Victor Mendés)
Aida Gouveia
- Antónia, a Nun
- (as Isa Schneider)
Herman José
- Manuel Gonçalves, the Prince
- (as Hermann Krippahl)
José Viana
- The Grand Inquisitor
- (as Jose Viana)
Patrícia Leal
- Maria's Mother
- (as Patricia Da Silva)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was complete in 1975, but it went through a number of censorship bans (the first on 3 March 1976), appeals, rejections, and editing for release in different markets in 1977 and 1978.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Peter Baumgartner, Filmkameramann (2014)
Featured review
Spanish horror director Jesús "Jess" Franco died recently, so I decided to watch one of his movies. "Die Liebesbriefe einer portugesischen Nonne" ("Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun" in English) offers a scathing look at the Catholic Church. It tells the story of a teenage girl whom a priest sees cavorting with a boy, and he makes her become a nun as penance. We see how the nuns are sexually repressed, while the priest and mother superior do everything possible to humiliate the novice. Specifically, there's a lot of torture going on. There are some VERY ugly scenes.
On the one hand this is basically the average movie that goes as much for shock value as possible. Even so, the movie is also an indictment of the RCC's blatant hypocrisy (note the scene where the priest uses the girl's confession as a way to get sexually aroused). The Church's policies in Medieval Europe constituted some of the most vicious misogyny imaginable.
It's only the second Jess Franco movie that I've seen. In fact, the copy that I saw looked like a copy of a copy (or copied from the TV) and was dubbed in English with Finnish subtitles! I hope to see more of his movies in the future. Just understand that this is a good movie, but definitely not for the fainthearted.
On the one hand this is basically the average movie that goes as much for shock value as possible. Even so, the movie is also an indictment of the RCC's blatant hypocrisy (note the scene where the priest uses the girl's confession as a way to get sexually aroused). The Church's policies in Medieval Europe constituted some of the most vicious misogyny imaginable.
It's only the second Jess Franco movie that I've seen. In fact, the copy that I saw looked like a copy of a copy (or copied from the TV) and was dubbed in English with Finnish subtitles! I hope to see more of his movies in the future. Just understand that this is a good movie, but definitely not for the fainthearted.
- lee_eisenberg
- Jun 1, 2013
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