The Testament of Ann Lee ~ Feature Film Released in Venice, US and the UK

Mango Sorbet

What Am I made for?
“The Testament of Ann Lee” is a theatrical release, and no streaming platform has announced rights. Categorized as a Historical Drama, Musical, and Biography, based on the life of Ann […]
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I just watched the trailer and Seyfried really sells it. The way she sings those old Shaker hymns gives me chills. Never knew much about Ann Lee before but now I’m curious how someone from 1700s England ends up starting a whole movement about no sex and dancing for God. The movie looks beautiful too, those wide shots of the villages feel real. Might catch it in theaters next month if it’s still playing nearby. Solid 8/10 from the trailer alone.
 
As someone who grew up near an old Shaker site, this hits different. The film gets the simple furniture and clean lines right, and the dancing scenes feel respectful, not mocking. Ann Lee’s life was tough—lost all her kids, jailed, crossed an ocean. Seyfried shows the exhaustion behind the visions. Not a light watch, but it’s honest about what faith can demand from a person. Worth seeing if you like real history over popcorn stuff.
 
7.1 on IMDb seems low for what people are saying. Trailer has me hooked already. The mix of drama and those joyful group dances is smart—it shows why people followed her even when life got hard. Mona Fastvold did a good job keeping it grounded. Seyfried deserves more credit; she carries heavy roles like this without overacting. Hope it gets more buzz after the UK drop.
 
Shakers still have a couple tiny communities left, but the movie probably won’t mention how small they are now. Ann Lee’s rules basically guaranteed the group would die out—no kids means no future. Interesting choice to make a whole film about someone whose ideas couldn’t last long-term. Seyfried looks committed though. I’ll probably rent it when it hits digital.
 
Amanda Seyfried really disappears into Ann Lee—her voice during those shaking songs gave me chills. The way they show the persecution in England and then the tough crossing to America feels real, not over-dramatized. I like how the musical parts aren’t just random; they come from actual Shaker hymns, so it doesn’t feel forced. The movie makes you think about what it costs to believe something so strongly that you give up everything normal. Not everyone will like the slow pace in the middle, but for me it worked. Solid 8/10, I might watch it again.
 
Okay, I’m a history nerd and this one hit different. They got so many details right—the quotes are exact, the clothing, even the way they built those villages. But what got me is how the movie shows Ann Lee as both visionary and kind of tragic. She believed she was the female Christ, and her followers bought it completely, yet you see the human side too. The voyage to America looks brutal. Seyfried’s singing voice surprised me—she’s strong in those group songs. If you like real stories over superhero stuff, watch this.
 
Not gonna lie, I expected something boring from a historical musical, but this kept me hooked. Amanda Seyfried looks exhausted by the end, and you believe every second of it. The persecution scenes in England are rough to watch. Then the Shaker life in America—communal work, no marriage, constant dancing—it’s fascinating but also isolating. The director didn’t sugarcoat how demanding Ann Lee’s rules were. I came away respecting her courage even if I wouldn’t join. Definitely recommend if you want something different.
 

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