The Testament of Ann Lee is about 70% conventional bio-pic: the picture traces the life of Ann Lee, the visionary founder of the Shakers. About a third of the movie is comprised of Shaker tunes, simple, melodies with devotional words that either sung or chanted or, in some cases, rhythmically grunted. These songs are choreographed as modern dance sequences in which the performers stamp their feet and beat on their chests with both hands to create percussive accompaniment to their dancing. The dance scenes, sometimes involving dancers hurling themselves across dark forests or charging into lush meadows, involve massed forces and are, at least, initially, thrilling. (The movie is too long and includes too many choreography scenes which become repetitive.) This rather dour, and morose, movie about a religious cult is, in fact, a musical -- music is integral to the film's meaning and represents a way to visualize the religious devotion of the sect. The sound track's score is also alive with droning noises, slithery skittering tremolos on violin, and other avant-garde techniques -- the score is like a lavishly orchestrated and late romantic illustration of a book on entomology. It's unearthly and, often, strangely beautiful in an inhuman manner. Paradoxically, the best dance number in the movie is the last which is the least flamboyant -- this dance scene represents the Shaker's characteristic ritual movements: they plod around in slow circles, sex-segregated: sometimes the ranks of men shuffle forward with their upraised hands twitching in prayer while the women keep time by stomping their feet. An overhead shot shows us the groups of dancers rotating slowly on the Meeting House floor -- the shuffling and the stomping gives the movement something of the aspect of ceremonial dancing at an Indian pow-wow. The expressive leaping around in the earlier dance scenes, often punctuated by people yelping and screaming and gibbering in tongues, is choreographed to "mean something" and, therefore, ultimately less effective than the sober dancing, ecstatic but determined, the motions of people who will be dancing for hours, in the film's last scenes. You feel that you are looking into a real Shaker worship service, while the other dances, mostly, strike the viewer as slightly ridiculous variations on typical expressionist modern dance.
Conventional bio-pics are predictable and, unfortunately, tend toward dullness. Except for the dancing, The Testament of Ann Lee, which is scrupulously realistic and historical, is sober, respectful, and slightly tedious.. The chief interest in the film is the dramatization of events that will not be familiar to most people, episodes in the life of a religious visionary who founded a proto-feminist cult. Mona Fastvold directed the film written by her and her husband, Brady Corbett -- the two of them wrote The Brutalist and two other renowned art-house films, also featuring remarkable, through-composed scores. Fastvold cleaves to the known facts about Mother Ann as the members of her sect called her. True to form the movie commences with Ann Lee's birth and childhood and ends with the burial of her body, apparently at a commune that she founded, at Nisakyuna, New York. The movie is beautifully shot in muted, almost monochromatic colors -- there are landscapes that have the slightly blurred and grubby look of Constable paintings and interiors are bathed in subdued Vermeer lighting. The exteriors are often wintry and sere with bare trees standing in windy, snow-covered forests. Fastvold is committed to making the movie beautiful in its dark, grim way and this is apparent in very early scenes that show Ann as a little girl working in a textile mill in Manchester, England. The mill is objectively horrific, a place with toxic drifting fibers and the children wrestle with big hurtful looms and wear masks against the pollutants in the air. But Fastvold's imagery of the mill and child workers is very elegant, a symphony in soft whites and greys.
Ann's father is a blacksmith. When Ann is about nine,she wakes up one night to see her father ramming himself into her rather listless, bored-looking mother. This horrifies Ann and, at supper with her seven siblings, she declares her father is a villain for mistreating her mother in that way. This earns Ann a beating to which her mother only very mildly objects. As a teenager, Ann joins a sect of Methodist who have developed a theory that God is bisexual and that the Jesus' second-coming will occur in ther person of a woman. These people celebrate by ecstatic dancing while they make gobbling noises and call out for forgiveness -- they are called the Shaking Quakers. At this time, Ann marries another blacksmith. This guy has the habit of whipping her with bundles of twigs while engaging in coitus a tergo. Ann is unenthusiastic about these conjugal relations and, in fact, considers them devilish. Four times she is pregnant and four times the child dies before it is a year old. (We see bloody birth scenes and the new-born rejecting Ann's breast.) This misery drives Ann half-insane and further into the arms of the religious sect to which she now belongs. There's some half-hearted persecutions by the authorities associated with the Church of England and Ann is thrown in jail where she nearly dies of inanition. (In jail, she practices levitation but without much success). Released from jail, Ann is carried to an infirmary where she remains very ill. It's at this infirmary that she conceives, with her patrons the "Shaking Quakers", the idea of fleeing Britain for America. There's a tumultuous sea journey with the sailors taunting the Shakers until a tempest in which Mother Ann's prayers seem to save the ship. On board, the Shakers dance and sing "All is concert / All is Summer / While to Heaven we are going." In New York, the small band of Shakers -- there are about ten of them -- see a slave auction which Mother Ann denounces, crying "Shame! Shame!" The American scenes are a reprise of the Book of Acts in the Gospel and will be received by viewers, more or less, in accord with their responses to that part of the Bible. I am an admirer of Acts and believe it to be an early example of the epic form in literature applied to the Gospel -- but the Acts is repetitive and triumphalist as is The Testament. A young man and woman are caught in flagrante, making out in a privy apparently and they are banished from the group. (Mother Ann says that their love is a 'beautiful thing' but not to be tolerated in the celibate sect of the Shakers.) Later, Ann's husband gives her an ultimatum -- have sex with me or I will abandon you. Ann is unrelenting -- at least, the blacksmith husband finally gets the blow job for which he has been importuning Ann for years, paying a prostitute for her services before departing from the movie. One of the Saints, using his twitching index finger as a dowsing stick finds a prophesied meadow along the Hudson in Upstate New York where the Shaker colony of Nisakyuna is founded. (There are shapely montages of the Shaker's working wood on the lathe and planing timber to make their famous chairs and meeting houses.) "Do your work as you would live for a thousand years," Mother Ann says, "and, also, as if you would die tomorrow." There's more dancing intercut with shots of austere, modernist-looking interiors of the men and women's dormitories and the meeting houses. Ann is threatened both by the British and the Americans -- the Americans doubt her group's commitment to the Revolutionary War that is ongoing. After another imprisonment, Ann Lee is released by Governor Clinton. She goes on a long tour of New England and founds six new colonies. Near the end, a mob of armed men attack the Shakers at night, burn their buildings, and savagely thrash Mother Ann -- the men are tied-up over a fallen log and whipped into unconsciousness. (The men strip Mother Ann and expose her genitals to determine if she is true woman or a eunuch.) It's not clear to me who these persecuting brutes are affliliated with. The War ends and Mother Lee, much debilitated by travel and hardship, declines, becomes forgetful and dies at age 48. The women wash her corpse while the Shaker's dance and, then, she is buried. In the last shot, we see the Meeting House with an image of the Tree of Life stenciled on the end-wall, a male and female Shaker is silhouette looking at one another but silent and motionless. The shot has the prim elegance of late 18th century American folk art.
The film has a Shaker-like simplicity and directness: there's nothing fancy about it. A noteworthy aspect is the portrayal of Mother Ann by Amanda Seyfried, a bold and courageous performance but monotonous. There is a voice-over narrated by a woman who has a cast in one eye -- she tells the story in simple language, keeping us moored as to time and place. Of course, the Shaker's insistence on celibacy doomed them. There were two surviving Shakers in 2025, both elderly and living at Sabbathday Lake in Maine. A 57-year old woman from an Episcopal Convent joined them in that year, bringing their number up to three. You retain the movie in your mind and I now believe it is better than it first appears.