• Latest
  • Trending
Oh My Goodness! Review

Oh My Goodness! Review: Pedaling Faith and Folly

Kevin Costner’s The West Review

Kevin Costner’s The West Review: Required Viewing for Americans

Hello Stranger Review

Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

Rise of Industry 2 Review

Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

The Road to Patagonia Review

The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

The Wonderers Review

The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

The Protector Review

The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

The Chambermaid Review

The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

Survival Kids Review

Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

Monsters of California Review

Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

f1

Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

4 hours ago
james cameron

Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

4 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    f1

    Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

    james cameron

    Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

    Studio

    Cain Exit Forces Sunderland’s £450 m Crown Works to Hunt New Backer

    Anna Maxwell-Martin

    First Look at Jimmy McGovern’s Unforgivable Reveals Gritty Liverpool Family Drama

    Clark Kent

    Superman’s Spectacles Get a Sci-Fi Upgrade in James Gunn Film

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Tracking Split on ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as July 4 Box-Office Race Begins

    Valley of Hearts

    Turkish Hit ‘Valley of Hearts’ Lands New Global Deals

    A Useful Ghost

    Cineverse Picks Up Cannes Winner ‘A Useful Ghost’ for U.S. Release

    Sentimental Value

    Trailer Drops for Trier’s Cannes Winner ‘Sentimental Value’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Kevin Costner’s The West Review

    Kevin Costner’s The West Review: Required Viewing for Americans

    Hello Stranger Review

    Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

    The Road to Patagonia Review

    The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

    The Wonderers Review

    The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

    The Protector Review

    The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

    The Chambermaid Review

    The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

    Monsters of California Review

    Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

    13 Days 13 Nights Review

    13 Days 13 Nights Review: Diplomacy Under Fire in Kabul

  • Game Reviews
    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

    Nice Day for Fishing Review

    Nice Day for Fishing Review: Casting a Strategic Spell

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review: Come for the Mechs, Not the Makeover

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review: Still the King of Sci-Fi Horror

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review: Anxiety in Pixel Form

    Islands & Trains Review

    Islands & Trains Review: A Minimalist Escape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    f1

    Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

    james cameron

    Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

    Studio

    Cain Exit Forces Sunderland’s £450 m Crown Works to Hunt New Backer

    Anna Maxwell-Martin

    First Look at Jimmy McGovern’s Unforgivable Reveals Gritty Liverpool Family Drama

    Clark Kent

    Superman’s Spectacles Get a Sci-Fi Upgrade in James Gunn Film

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Tracking Split on ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as July 4 Box-Office Race Begins

    Valley of Hearts

    Turkish Hit ‘Valley of Hearts’ Lands New Global Deals

    A Useful Ghost

    Cineverse Picks Up Cannes Winner ‘A Useful Ghost’ for U.S. Release

    Sentimental Value

    Trailer Drops for Trier’s Cannes Winner ‘Sentimental Value’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Kevin Costner’s The West Review

    Kevin Costner’s The West Review: Required Viewing for Americans

    Hello Stranger Review

    Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

    The Road to Patagonia Review

    The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

    The Wonderers Review

    The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

    The Protector Review

    The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

    The Chambermaid Review

    The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

    Monsters of California Review

    Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

    13 Days 13 Nights Review

    13 Days 13 Nights Review: Diplomacy Under Fire in Kabul

  • Game Reviews
    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

    Nice Day for Fishing Review

    Nice Day for Fishing Review: Casting a Strategic Spell

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review: Come for the Mechs, Not the Makeover

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review: Still the King of Sci-Fi Horror

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review: Anxiety in Pixel Form

    Islands & Trains Review

    Islands & Trains Review: A Minimalist Escape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Oh My Goodness! Review

Uncontained Review: Rethinking the Rules of the Undead

Empyreal Review: Mastering Combat in the Monolith

Home Entertainment Movies

Oh My Goodness! Review: Pedaling Faith and Folly

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
2 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

A drone’s quiet hum gives way to a radiant sweep over the French Jura, where rolling emerald hills cradle a lone convent. In that first breath of light, Sister Béatrice twirls beneath a cloudless sky—an ode to The Sound of Music, yet tinged with something more unsettled: the fragile joy of souls adrift.

At its heart, Oh My Goodness! asks how faith and folly might collide when five Benedictine nuns sign up for a local cycling race, chasing a €25,000 prize to restore a crumbling nursing home. Their venture feels almost absurd—habits against handlebars—but beneath the slapstick spills a contemplative undercurrent: what drives us to pedal toward salvation, whether divine or earthly?

Director Laurent Tirard wraps this frothy caper in bright laughter, the pace brisk at just under ninety minutes. A swift montage of training scenes punctuates the narrative, each pratfall and sabotaged wheel delivering both comic relief and a subtle meditation on human ambition. At its core stand two forces: Mother Superior Véronique, whose hunger for triumph masks deeper longings, and young Gwendoline, whose smartphone-wielding vitality unsettles ancient traditions. In their interplay, the film hints at an existential crossroads, where duty, desire, and the absurd meet on a sun-drenched road without map or guarantee.

Cycles of Faith and Folly

Beneath sterile fluorescent lights and the faded murals of St. Mary’s nursing home, the nuns’ resolve flickers into life. Their first step through those echoing corridors—hands brushing frail shoulders—sets the stage for a collision of charity and absurdity. Confronted with peeling paint and trembling voices, they glimpse the chasm between devotion and impotence. Then comes the glint of a €25,000 prize in a local cycling race—a deus ex machina that transforms benevolence into a high-stakes sprint toward redemption.

In the opening act, we tumble alongside Sister Béatrice’s graceless attempts to master a bicycle, each comic fall teetering between slapstick glee and existential unease. The convent courtyard becomes a proving ground: littered helmets, scuffed habits, ragged prayers. Gwendoline—youth incarnate with her ceaseless tapping on a smartphone—slips into the role of reluctant mentor. Her digital world, brimming with algorithms and instant gratifications, collides violently with centuries-old ritual, revealing how progress and piety can form an uneasy tandem.

As the sisters’ confidence swells, a darker symmetry emerges: Mother Josephine’s rival convent, clad in sharp jerseys and silent scowls, arrives like an omen. Their pro-caliber cyclists roll out with military precision, turning friendly competition into an almost gladiatorial spectacle. Whoopie cushions, oil-slicked handlebars, and sabotaged spokes turn the racecourse into a labyrinth of moral compromise: at what point does zeal for a good cause dissolve into outright treachery?

Then the climax unfolds in a breathless montage across sunlit vineyards and shadowed forest glades. Flashbacks punctuate each hill conquered and each bruise earned—memory and motion entwined. When the Benedictine sisters taste victory, only to witness Josephine’s arrival at the last bend, the world tilts on its axis: triumph is provisional, faith a fragile construct.

In the final sprint, wheels spin against the weight of doubt. And though the finish line may blur, their collective heartbeat—audible in every pedal stroke—echoes a simple truth: community, in its imperfect form, might offer the truest solace.

Portraits in Habit and Hubris

Mother Superior Véronique cuts an intriguing figure—at once the embodiment of spiritual gravitas and a secret architect of her own ambitions. Valérie Bonneton infuses her with an almost tragicomic duality: the earnest supplicant yearning for divine favor, and the schemer eyeing a Vatican pilgrimage as though it were a personal coronation. In her fantasy sequences with a Pope lookalike, time seems to dilate—laughter echoes, but beneath it lies a question of authenticity. Can devotion born of self-interest ever be anything but a mirror held to a deeper void?

Oh My Goodness! Review

Then there is Gwendoline, that restless spark of youth, played by Louise Malek with a tremor of uncertainty. Her smartphone is a talisman, a lifeline to a world beyond cloister walls, and yet each notification chime seems to underscore her isolation. Observing her metamorphosis—from reluctant ingénue to the sisters’ unspoken lodestar—raises an unsettling thought: when the outsider leads, what becomes of the old order she both serves and subverts?

Guilaine Londez’s Sister Béatrice offers a softer counterpoint. Her beauty-queen past, briefly sketched in wistful flashback, feels like a whispered elegy for lost innocence. She spins on her toes beneath the open sky, evoking The Sound of Music even as it reminds us of freedom’s cruel price: each pirouette a testament to hope grappling with gravity.

Camille Chamoux’s Augustine rides in on literal and metaphorical scars—tattoos trailing stories of rebellion and grace. Witnessing her redemption through sport, one senses the flicker of Nietzsche’s will to power, transformed into a will to belonging. She is the bridge between the convent’s ancient vows and the primal delight of muscle and motion.

Opposite them stands Mother Josephine, Sidse Babett Knudsen’s portrait of icy authority. Every clipped barb recalls a shared childhood wound, as though rivalry itself has become a sacrament. Her presence sharpens the sisters’ bonds, forging solidarity in the crucible of competition.

Together, these seven lives form a fragile mosaic. The trainer’s gentle guidance, the abbot’s silent watchfulness, even the nursing home residents’ weary blessings—all converge to ask: what alchemy transmutes disparate souls into a single path of purpose?

Puppeteering the Absurd: Direction, Screenplay & Humor

Laurent Tirard wields the camera like a painter’s brush, layering pastoral panoramas and sudden chiaroscuro of human folly. His opening drone sweep over the Jura hills feels like a promise—sunlit grandeur as foil to the sisters’ clumsy quest. Yet in the very next frame, a flashback intrudes: a childhood rivalry reborn in cycling cleats. These daydream inserts—of Pope-vision fantasies—fracture the narrative, suggesting that reality and reverie share the same fragile edge.

Oh My Goodness! Review

In the hands of Cécile Larripa and Philippe Pinel, dialogue crackles with paradox. Vows of silence become chalkboard proclamations, each quip scrawled in white dust: “Let’s dope like real cyclists,” reads one sardonic line, where sacrilege and satire converge. Slapstick falls jostle against whispered wordplay—knights of the habit wielding whoopie cushions as existential talismans. The screenplay times its jokes with the precision of clockwork, yet sometimes the mechanism stalls: a gag too familiar, a pun that lands with the weight of a flat tire.

Tirard’s pacing is a delicate tightrope walk. A Rocky-style training montage soars with rhythmic urgency, only to skid into a banana-peel gag that feels almost willful in its absurdity. When the humor clicks—oil-slick sabotage or an archbishop’s impression—it opens a fissure where laughter and unease merge. At other moments, the tone slips, and one senses the absurdity’s kernel left too exposed, as though the film itself hesitates before peering into the void.

Yet for all its teetering, the comedy maintains a heartbeat of warmth. A racing bicycle becomes both chalice and burden: an instrument of salvation, yes, but also a reminder of life’s relentless motion. In these set pieces, we sense a Camus-like absurdism at play—the sisters’ faith is sincere, even if their methods border on the ludicrous. And through it all, Tirard invites us to consider: is laughter our final refuge against meaning’s collapse, or merely another form of prayer?

Canvas of Light and Sound

The camera lingers on the rolling slopes of the French Jura as if reluctant to leave beauty unexamined. Golden hour bathes each hill in quiet ecstasy, a visual hymn to nature’s indifference. Within the convent’s stone walls, lens and light conspire to reveal worn wooden beams and chipped plaster—an intimacy that suggests both sanctuary and entombment.

Oh My Goodness! Review

Costumes become silent narrators: the sisters’ grey habits, frayed at the sleeves, speak of vows etched into flesh. When they mount their bicycles, those same habits collide with neon-striped jerseys—an abrupt chromatic rupture in the pastoral palette. The ragged relics of their bikes—rust-dusted spokes, creaking chains—stand in stark counterpoint to the rival convent’s gleaming machines, where every spoke seems spun from ambition.

A jaunty accordion waltz threads through the soundtrack, lilting as if to coax laughter from the deepest gorge of despair. At moments of impact, the thud of a fall resonates like a church bell tolling—an audible reminder that each misstep carries weight beyond mere comedy. In quieter stretches, ambient birdsong and the distant murmur of prayer merge so seamlessly one wonders whether it is the score shaping the scene, or the scene summoning its score. And in those oscillations between sound and silence, we glimpse the film’s true motif: life’s fragile harmony, balanced precariously on two spinning wheels.

Echoes of Hope and Absurdity

In Oh My Goodness!, the underdog spirit emerges as a gentle rebellion—a sisterhood that pedals against its own limitations, forging community out of shared missteps. Their camaraderie, knotted together by falls and faltering prayers, suggests that solidarity is forged not in triumph but in the struggle itself. Youthful Gwendoline’s cheeky defiance collides with the convent’s centuries-old rituals, bridging generations in a single breath of collective breathlessness.

Oh My Goodness! Review

Faith here wears a playful mask. Sacred symbols become instruments of satire rather than dogma—chalices shared alongside bicycle water bottles, the vow of silence breached by mischievous chalkboard messages. This subversive creativity hums beneath every laugh, asking whether devotion must be solemn or if it can pulsing with mischief.

Redemption flickers in flashbacks of beauty-queen crowns and tattooed leather jackets. The past, once a closed chapter, opens as each sister discovers new purpose in the pedals’ relentless spin. Yet one wonders: is the charitable cause merely a narrative prop, or does it awaken genuine transformation beneath the habits’ folds?

Nostalgia glints in sweeping drone shots and the Edelweiss gag—a wink to The Sound of Music that both honors and unsettles. And when the training montage recalls the rhythmic drive of classic sports films, we sense that the most profound victories may lie not at the finish line, but in the reverberations of a shared heartbeat.

Epilogue of Wheels and Whimsy

Oh My Goodness! drifts between buoyant delight and structural thinness. Its ensemble warmth—each sister’s earnest spark—elevates moments of genuine connection, even as the central premise sometimes feels like a paper-thin scaffold for spectacle. When the film soars, it is in the alchemy of shared laughter; when it stalls, it reminds us how swiftly lightheartedness can tip into triviality.

Oh My Goodness! Review

This caper suits those who seek gentle amusement over gut-wrenching drama. Sunday-matinee dreamers, fans of slapstick underdogs, and anyone who finds solace in communal folly will embrace its charms. But viewers hunting for philosophical depth or searing satire may find its edges too rounded, its ambitions modest.

Rooted in affectionate homage and buoyed by spirited performances, the film balances its nods to The Sound of Music and sports-film tropes with enough fresh beats to sustain a cheerful spin. Its scenic vistas, mischievous gags, and human warmth make it a lightweight yet satisfying journey.

Full Credits

Director: Laurent Tirard

Writers: Cécile Larripa, Philippe Pinel, Laurent Tirard

Producers: Olivia Lagache

Cast: Valérie Bonneton, Camille Chamoux, Claire Nadeau, Sidse Babett Knudsen, Guilaine Londez, Louise Malek, François Morel

Director of Photography: Éric Blanckaert

Editors: Anne-Sophie Bion, Sahra Mekki

Composer: Mathieu Lamboley

The Review

Oh My Goodness!

6 Score

Ultimately, Oh My Goodness! spins a lighthearted fable of faith and folly that charms more often than it challenges, its scenic beauty and warm ensemble carrying the flimsy premise to an amiable finish. Though moments of genuine heart flicker amid the slapstick, the film’s ambitions remain modest—best enjoyed as a breezy, sunlit escape rather than a probing meditation.

PROS

  • Charming ensemble chemistry
  • Gorgeous French Jura vistas
  • Lively, fast-paced training montage
  • Playful, lighthearted tone
  • Moments of genuine warmth

CONS

  • Thin, predictable premise
  • Humor occasionally falls flat
  • Limited thematic depth
  • Rivalry gags can feel repetitive
  • Underused nursing-home setting

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Camille ChamouxCécile LarripaClaire NadeauComedyEric BlanckaertFeaturedLaurent TirardOh My Goodness!Valérie Bonneton
Previous Post

Uncontained Review: Rethinking the Rules of the Undead

Next Post

Empyreal Review: Mastering Combat in the Monolith

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Ice Road Vengeance Review

    Ice Road: Vengeance Review – Liam Neeson’s Diminishing Returns Continue

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sound Review: A Long Way Down

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Smoke Review: The Year’s Most Unpredictable and Unsettling Show

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stand Your Ground Review: All Action, No Substance

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Foundation Season 3 Review
TV Shows

Foundation Season 3 Review: Streaming’s Most Ambitious Spectacle

7 hours ago
Jurassic World Rebirth Review
Movies

Jurassic World Rebirth Review: Technically Impressive, Creatively Extinct

8 hours ago
Heads of State Review
Movies

Heads of State Review: Elba and Cena Carry the Ticket

3 days ago
Squid Game Season 3 Review
Entertainment

Squid Game Season 3 Review: No Happy Endings Here

4 days ago
Love Island USA Season 7 Review
Entertainment

Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

5 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version