 
  Review by
        Benjamin Poole
  Directed by: Teona Strugar Mitevska
  Starring: Zorica
      Nusheva, Labina Mitevska, Simeon Moni Damevski, Suad Begovski, Stefan Vujisic, Violeta Shapkovska
 
    
      Although on paper North Macedonia is committed to gender equality (via the
      Convention on Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women in
      1994- CEDAW), statistical evidence tells a different story. Governmental
      positions held by women are dependent on electoral quotas and women are
      largely underrepresented in executive and decision-making positions (all
      of this from eca.unwomen.org). What is more damning is that nearly half
      the female population of North Macedonia have experienced domestic
      violence at the hands of an intimate partner: suggesting that the hopeful
      ideologies of the CEDAW remain far removed from the common day patriarchy
      of the country, where the indications are that women have a second-class
      citizen lack of status.

      This is certainly the case in Teona Strugar Mitevska’s (with script
      support from Elma Tataragic)
      God Exists, Her Name is Petrunya, which sees the titular character repressed by the deeply conservative
      society of small-town North Macedonia. Petrunya (Zorica Nusheva -
      fantastic) is overqualified and unemployed, she lives with her parents,
      and her mother barely disguises her frustration at Petrunya’s unmarried
      status (a circumstance which the film implies is partly due to Petrunya
      not conforming to the sort of limited hegemony her basic-bloke peers
      respond to, but mainly due to the grown woman being stubbornly, and
      rightfully, self-sufficient). Petrunya’s aunty gets her an interview for
      some so-so admin job, wherein the male interviewer, this balding piece of
      shit in a cheap AF suit, makes sexual advances towards Petrunya before
      humiliating her. Why? Simply because he, and other men like him, can,
      Mitevska implies.

      So, it’s no wonder that the obstinate and proud Petrunya DGAF when she is
      party to an annual pseudo-religious steeplechase wherein the church throws
      a crucifix into the river for the local men to scramble and retrieve for
      kudos (in fairness, it does sound amazing). Mitevska frames this event
      with pointed symbolism. On the bridge above are the patriarchal denizens
      of the church, chanting and burning incense in their heavy robes. Below
      are the aggressively braying working-class men of the village, jostling
      for status with their tops off, and completely unspiritual. In-between,
      pushed to the side is our heroine, watching the unedifying spectacle with
      a jaundiced eye. She jumps into the water herself and only goes and grabs
      the cross!

      This causes all manner of shit, a conflict which dominates the rest of the
      film. It’s a delicious irony how ecclesiastical law states that the person
      who retrieves the cross is the winner, yet tradition dictates that only
      men can partake in this competition: two ridiculous decrees contradicting
      each other’s silliness. Soon after local news announces that competition
      winner Petrunya ‘is on the loose’, she is arrested, the men riot, and the
      higher echelons of the Macedonian Orthodox Church are canvassed. It would
      be funny, if not for the fact that, in contrast to the knockabout tones of
      the first act, Mitevska’s film takes a darker turn when (just like Someone
      Else who we may associate with a cross, eh?) Petrunya is persecuted and
      vilified. At the halfway mark,
      God Exists, Her Name is Petrunya becomes a Kafkaesque
      scenario of repetitive, crushing absurdity. For some audiences, perhaps
      the tonal shift may not make good on the sprightly, colourful tones of the
      first act, but for the real life Petrunyas anything less than this
      nightmare representation would be wholly disingenuous.
    
     
    
      God Exists, Her Name is Petrunya is in
      US cinemas and virtual cinemas now. A UK/ROI release has yet to be
      announced.
    
     
