Lilies of the Field (1963) Poster

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9/10
Charming little film with Sidney Poitier as an itinerant handyman in rural Arizona.
Slim-426 November 1999
This charming, black and white film testifies to the power of faith. Five nuns who escaped over the Wall from East Germany are trying to start a new life in rural Arizona. Mother Superior (played by Lilia Skala) believes that Homer Smith (played by Sidney Poitier) has been sent by God to build a chapel. Smith demurs. He is a Baptist who isn't really religious. He would rather eat a big breakfast at Juan's (played by Stanley Adams) cafe than go to church behind the makeshift altar on Father Murphy's (played by Dan Frazer) pickup truck. The father describes religion graphically for Smith. "Welcome to the Poor Man's Vatican", he says as he ushers Smith into his small trailer home. "You take confession, provide absolution, bless the babies, hook up the trailer, kick the tires and pray. . .pray that the old car holds together to the next stop".

Faith permeates this film and it is catching. Mother Superior shows her faith in Smith as she introduces him to Mr. Ashton, a big local contractor. Ashton was played by Director Ralph Nelson and is one of the more engaging characters in the film. Interestingly, it is Ashton's skepticism about Smith's ability to the job that persuades Smith to stay. Mother Superior's faith ultimately is transmitted to the local Hispanic community and even Mr. Ashton. Cafe owner Juan puts the issue very much in perspective when he says that his work on the chapel is about "insurance". He doesn't really believe in God, he says, but just in case there is a hereafter he wants to be prepared.

The characterizations in this film are wonderful and deep. There is a strain of stubbornness in both Mother Superior and Homer Smith. It is a miracle they are able to work together. Indeed, Smith leaves the unfinished chapel behind for several weeks at one point. "Why don't you say thank you to me", he asks the Mother Superior. "You couldn't help yourself", she says.

Homer Smith isn't quite sure of himself. He is very uncomfortable in the role that Mother Superior sees for him. Later, when he returns to work on the chapel he stubbornly refuses the help of the locals. He sees himself as the one chosen to build the chapel. Mother Superior chides him as does Juan. "Where would you like us to bury you?", he asks. Ultimately, the locals take over the project with disastrous results. Homer steps in and directs the work to its completion.

Homer's disappearance in the middle of the film is a mystery. He has a problem with being the chosen one and drives away in his station wagon. When he returns the door on the passenger side is now wired shut. He is also dressed in an obviously loud Hawaiian shirt. His unusual dress is topped off by dark glasses. It is like he has returned from a two-week drunk. When he goes to have his big breakfast in the cafe, he wants very little to eat.

Juan is one of my favorite characters in this film. I liked Juan's homespun philosophy. The scene in which Homer eats the big breakfast at the beginning of the film is very good. The two characters are very much alike. Both came from religious families, but neither are religious. Ultimately, they are both empowered by faith.

Like Juan, Mr. Ashton is also a businessman. He too is enriched by the building of the chapel. He delivers a load of bricks for the chapel. When the Mother Superior calls out to him, he remarks that he should have sent them anonymously. On the way out he complains to Homer Smith that she won't let him alone now. Such is the price of faith.

Although it doesn't really go anywhere, this film has the look and feel of a road movie. The film begins with Homer Smith's car on a lonely road. Also, there are the images of the nuns trekking down the miles of empty gravel road to Sunday morning services. Father Murphy uses the road to go from one "country club" to another on his circuit. The blessing of the chapel is that it will be a focal point for the community. Father Murphy's church won't be on the road any longer. But Homer Smith must go. Mr. Ashton offers him a good job as a foreman, but he declines. He is a modern day tumbleweed going where the wind blows or, more accurately, where the road goes.

There is a racial edge to this film. Smith is black, and the nuns are white. Juan and the members of the community are Hispanic. Father Murphy is white. Ultimately, all of these people come together to build the chapel. One point in the film where race becomes overt is when Homer Smith meets Mr. Ashton. "Hey boy", he says to Smith. Smith quickly turns the tables on Ashton and calls him "boy". That seems to bridge the divide between them. In the end it is Ashton who offers Smith a position of foreman. In another scene Smith compares Mother Superior to Hitler. Later, Mother Superior returns the compliment. Ultimately, both are able to go beyond their stubbornness and work together.

This movie captures for me the special spirit of rural communities. I never grow tired of watching it.
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7/10
A '49s-type Film In The '60s!
ccthemovieman-130 May 2006
It took me over over 40 years before finally seeing this film, and I'm glad I finally did. It's simply a nice story: nothing super, but a feel-good film to use the cliché. This reminded of the kind of movie you would more likely see in the 1940s with the emphasis on human interest with a "religious" theme to it. I expected Father Flanagan to show up any minute.

Instead, we got a good Baptist man played by Sidney Poitier, who won an Oscar for this performance. Since he's just about the whole movie, and does a great job start-to-finish, who can argue with his award? This certainly doesn't have the feel of a 1960s film. It must have been one of the last of its kind, giving credence to Christianity and having a nice tone throughout. There have been very few like this since then.

Poitier is really the only "name" member of this cast and he's in every scene. If you enjoy his acting, and a good performance in general with a story that will bring some smiles to your face for an hour-and-a-half, this is recommended.
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7/10
Perceptible and sensitive film with an awesome Sidney Poitier
ma-cortes3 October 2006
Homer Smith (Sidney Poitier) is a stubborn , obstinate ex-soldier when heading himself to the West he stops at a farm in desert . There meets a group of speaking-German nuns from East European Catholic . They are ruled by a stiff Superior Mother called Mary (Lilia Skala) and she thinks Smith has been sent by Christ for the building their church . They'll develop a likable friendship , helping the unfortunate nuns and creating a particular divine mission until the touching ending .

It's a fascinating , quiet film , perfectly acted and concerning the narration about the construction a church of riveting manner . Gentle , sympathetic Poitier and the strict Superior nun confront wills each other , but finally learn the meaning of the power of God and ultimately come to respect themselves . The storyline by James Poe relies heavily on the continued relationship among them but it isn't tiring ; being entertained and with numerous diverting moments and agreeable feeling . Enjoyable comedy and laughters are continuous ; the chuckles are based on diverse characters and differences among protagonists , he's Protestant , nuns are Catholics . Biggest of the film are the musical duets between Poitier and the nuns . The movie is well set with nice rural scenarios and is't eventually hampered by racist stereotypes on the black men , neither Mexican people . The story is narrated with sensitivity and intelligence and are treated religious and ethic issues with great sense of fairness and ductility . Ideal cast completed with magnificent actors . Sidney Poitier won a well deserved Oscar . He was the second African-American to win an Academy Award , before won Hattie McDaniel and later will achieve it famous actors as Cuba Gooding , Denzel Washington and Halle Berry . Glamorous and sensational cinematography by Ernest Haller . Moving and phenomenal score by the great Jerry Goldsmith and beautiful blues-songs by Poitier . The motion picture was driven with enormous fair play by director Ralph Nelson (Blue soldier) who followed this with a television movie . This is a wholesome and politically correct family fare . Indispensable seeing for Poitier fans.
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My 'perfect' movie.
roarshock8 July 2000
If someone were to ask me for the 'perfect' movie, this is the one I would choose. Not 'greatest', not 'best', but something better... an utterly flawless film. It's lean and spare, set in the desert and filmed in B&W. Both the humor and the drama are low-key, but are all the more moving for that, presented without clutter. It uses a small cast to create a rich diversity of characters from different religions, races, and cultures. But these differences aren't what creates the drama, they are simply a wonderful part of the background texture. The conflict lies purely in the clash of personalities between two good people, Homer Smith (Sidney Poitier) and Mother Maria (Lilia Skala), both with their own personal flaws and virtues.

I really can't begin to describe how much I like "Lilies of the Field". It could have been one of those awful preachy 'message' films, but it isn't. It is purely fine story telling. Which isn't to say you can't find meaning in it. Far from it. For me, I've always been taken by how the common human goodness of all the characters is brought out without being dependent on, or sacrificing, their many differences of religion or culture. They remain the same people at the end of the movie as at the beginning, except they're all a bit better, a bit less flawed. And that's pretty close to perfection.
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10/10
Superb Film
Elspode5 September 2005
Of all the fine work done by Sidney Poitier during his heyday, this film stands out as the most accessible, the most likable and the most heartwarming. Poitier's portrayal of itinerant builder Homer Smith rings true throughout, a man living life on his own terms...yet still a humane and involved individual.

This film has everything that brings good humor to a movie. The classic "fish out of water" premise, amicable cross-cultural confusion, joyous music...but it is much, much more than a mere comedy; much more than a simple drama.

This film was made in the thick of the civil rights movement. A black man in close juxtaposition to a group of white nuns was an eyebrow raiser in the 60's, as was the overall multicultural setting. White, black, Mexican, Anglo, German, Hispanic - all are tossed together with such a deft hand that the occasional nod to the prevailing racist attitudes of the time is almost brushed aside as the film skillfully makes its point. The emphasis here is on people doing as people should do...working and living together, helping one another and learning and growing from the experience.

Perhaps this is the time for any of us who has seen this film to see it again, and ask ourselves how the lessons of "Lilies of the Field" can be applied to the recovery from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, and the relief of all the human misery that has resulted.
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8/10
Poitier is great
billcr1210 December 2019
Sidney Poitier won the best actor Oscar for this film and he deserved it playing a traveling handyman who is drafted by a flock of German nuns to build a church out in the deserted Southwest. He is a cynical man with a great singing voice and it is put is put to good use several times. This is a change of pace for me as I usually watch violent fare of the Tarantino style. We all need a pleasant change of pace once and a while.
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7/10
No Malice, No Prejudice, No Loss...
Xstal27 July 2020
Few are the films, past and especially present, that contain only pleasure and joy, or at least the seeds of them - even fairy tales have their villains. Heartwarming - absolutely, who wouldn't want to imagine themselves as Homer Smith with the generosity he affords the nuns, not just in building them their chapel but teaching them English and sharing a song or two.
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9/10
you can always trust Sidney Poitier
lee_eisenberg15 May 2005
While driving through Arizona, Homer Smith (Sidney Poitier) stops at a chapel run by a group of East German nuns. He intends to stay only briefly, but ends up building most of the chapel for them. Naturally, both sides are a bit unfamiliar with the other side: Homer has to explain to the nuns his life as a black man in America, and the nuns have to explain to Homer their mission in life.

As always, Sidney Poitier does a splendid job as a man forcing people to look into their own prejudices. In fact, his character is someone still looking for his path in life. Maybe some people might say that Poitier was essentially playing the same character that he always played, but we have to remember that this was a total break from the Stepin Fetchit mold that had dominated the image of black people for so long, so movies like "Lilies of the Field" were pretty important. Poitier's Oscar win for this movie was well-deserved.
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7/10
"All my life I wanted to really build something."
classicsoncall27 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
For anyone born in the last twenty years or so, it's probably hard to imagine how groundbreaking this film was in the turbulent early Sixties. A lot of things were getting under way, Viet Nam, the British Invasion and of course the Civil Rights movement. What's remarkable to me in this picture is that Sidney Poitier's color never seems to become an issue with the people that matter in the story. Granted, the supply store owner Ashton (Ralph Nelson) called Homer Smith (Poitier) 'boy' at one point, but Homer gave it right back to him and they were both on equal terms again. I thought that was handled quite professionally.

Overall however, I wasn't really grabbed by the picture the way other reviewers were from reading their comments here. It's not a bad picture mind you, but it's not particularly memorable either. While competent in his portrayal, Poitier didn't seem to be offering an Oscar caliber performance by demonstrating the the type of range Paul Newman displayed as Hud Bannon, another Best Actor contender the same year. I liked Poitier a whole lot better in "In the Heat of the Night"; I liked that movie a lot better too. Interestingly, 'Heat' also tackled the racial angle quite strongly as well and by virtue of his performance there, Poitier helped the cause of black actors in film quite admirably.

There was one scene I got a kick out of though. Comparing Bible passages, Mother Maria (Lilia Skala) had that tremendous volume that almost swamped the table, and Poitier's character matched her verse for verse with his little pocket edition. That was really quite comical.

Probably the best takeaway one gets from the story is how folks of diverse backgrounds and personalities can put their differences aside to come together in a spirit of harmony and community to pursue a goal. In this case, the mission was the mission, and Homer Smith was a pretty good man with a bulldozer.
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9/10
Poitier's Oscar Win Highlights His Charisma
EUyeshima12 January 2022
Although it's easy to dismiss the savior role he's playing in this sentimental and surprisingly comic fable, this is a good reminder of just how good Sidney Poitier was at the height of his career in 1963. Although it's not one of his favorite performances, it's one of mine, and he won the Oscar for this, the first for a leading black actor. You can still see why as it retains its feel-good aura.
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7/10
Moving and fun
fmwongmd22 September 2019
Well acted, well directed and fun movie with excellent portrayals by Sidney Poitier and Lilah Skala.
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9/10
Amen, Amen
bkoganbing28 December 2007
Lillies of the Field was one of those Hollywood Cinderella stories that the film colony likes to tell about itself. A film shot in only two weeks with a big star working way below his usual salary and a bunch of no-name players in the rest of the cast and it winds up contending for Best Picture with blockbusters like Cleopatra, How the West Was Won, and Tom Jones. Lillies of the Field might have won a few more Oscars if it wasn't for Tom Jones in the race.

Sidney Poitier plays Homer Smith, ex-GI whose truck breaks down at a convent in the Arizona desert. It's populated with a small group of German speaking nuns to whose order was left this property. The group is headed by Lilia Skala who's not going to let the fact she doesn't speak English deter her from building up the place. Starting with a chapel.

It seems like the Almighty has answered her prayers when she finds out Poitier has a construction background. The sister is convinced God is on her side and even without the Deity, she's pretty formidable all by herself. The rest of the story is their effort to make it happen.

I guess the closest example to this film I can come up with is Marty, another story without any real stars in it, shot on a shoestring budget that got to be Best Picture and win for Ernest Borgnine an Oscar for Best Actor and stardom. Lillies of the Field was up for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress for Lilla Skala and a few other categories. But it came home with one winner, Best Actor for Sidney Poitier the first black person to win in that category.

I don't think it would detract one bit from Poitier's achievement to say that the Civil Rights Revolution at its crest in 1964 might have just put Poitier over the top. His competition that year was Rex Harrison for Cleopatra, Paul Newman for Hud, Richard Harris for This Sporting Life and Albert Finney for Tom Jones. Tom Jones won a host of Oscars that year including Best Picture, but in 1964 in the wake of the Kennedy assassination and the news of the atrocities done to civil rights workers and the mounting pressure to pass the Civil Rights Act, Hollywood was casting its own voice of support in naming Sidney Poitier as Best Actor. As you can see Sidney Poitier faced some stiff competition in the category, I certainly wouldn't want to say he was better than Albert Finney or Paul Newman who got rave reviews for their performances.

Sidney Poitier was something special in Lillies of the Field. As his character Homer Smith says he's a camp meeting Baptist from the south. And the highlight of the film is him teaching the nuns to sing that Baptist camp meeting song, Amen. That was about brother and sisterhood and peoples of all kinds working together and respecting each other in their differences.

And for that reason, because that message is so vital today, the Academy voters gave Sidney Poitier a well deserved Oscar for delivering that message in an under-financed, but very beautiful film.
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7/10
Saturday put up a brick wall. That night watched Homer Smith build a chapel
thejcowboy2218 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Strange but true! On a cold cloudy March Saturday morning in 1974 I went to work for my Dad at his Boiler and heating company in Ozone Park,New York. My father acting as a General in the military, barking out the orders had about 12 men in his employ and sent them out to various locations throughout the New York metropolitan vicinity. I was sent with a crew of four to Jamaica, Queens to erect a brick wall to separate the newly added boiler room in a textile company. When I arrived at the factory, there were palates filled with cement bags and cinder blocks as far as the eyes can see. All day long I was mixing concrete and lifting blocks. When the long day was over I came home sore and tired. Put on the Television and saw a Black man arguing with a group of Nuns in the American southwest. Noticed the same cement cinder blocks and; well; my attention was held for the next 90 minutes. Sidney Poitier plays an unemployed heavy equipment operator Homer Smith who's station wagon just happens to overheat at the out-of-the way convent. Mother Maria (Lilia Skala) claims that Homer Smith or as she calls him "Schmidt" was brought here by divine intervention. She pesters him to all ends with demands on building a new house of worship. Smith gives in and agrees to build a chapel. I could feel his solitude and pain in that hot desert sun carrying bricks and mortar. The Arayaan Sisters in her Black Habits and poor Smith taking the complaining all day made this movie so plausible. Great supporting role by Stanley Adams as the philosophical cafe owner Juan. Mr. Ashton (Ralph Nelson) who currently employs Smith is amazed by the teamwork and moral obligations by the local people,(Mainly of Mexican decent), of this area give what they can in order to help Smith build with Bricks, wood, and in time a chapel sprouts up among the desert sands for all to see. Our heavy set cafe owner goes on."A place where children can receive the sacraments.For these men, for their children to have faith, it is important.To me it is insurance. To me life is here on Earth. I cannot see further. But, if there right about the hereafter. I've paid my insurance." You watch a chapel being built. First by the lonely Smith and little by little everyone joins in. Love the evening English lessons Smith gives the European sisters and rewards them with lollipops. The AMEN song is infectious and pleasing to the ear. Just a good feeling for a passerby in a station wagon who makes a difference in this small remote region of America. I give this one 7 church bells. AMEN!
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5/10
I'd like to rate higher, but i can't
dominik9612 March 2006
There is this odd feeling of giving only 5 points, but age doesn't protect a movie from a fair rating. Every movie has to face the competition, and there is no rebate for older participants. The story begins interesting with Poitier and the nuns, but it fails to invent some new jokes or more aspects. A black guy is building some nuns a church. It is enough for the first steps or the general direction. Delicious food doesn't become better if you are chewing one piece for 90 minutes. The same rule can be applied here. To skip some 30 minutes in the middle of it, has no negative consequences. You will not loose any clues. No tension,no action,no colour,no jokes only a story that becomes more boring with every minute and a comical situation that looses it's stance after ten minutes.
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Sidney Poitier's Place in Cinematic History.
tfrizzell27 July 2002
The film that until 2001 sported the only African-American Best Actor or Actress Oscar winner. Sidney Poitier (in an excellent Oscar-winning performance) stars as an unemployed handyman whose car breaks down in New Mexico. He is greeted by a group of German nuns led by Lilia Skala (Oscar-nominated). The nuns are in desperate need of a church and it just seems that Poitier is not going to be able to shake Skala and the various duties she imposes on him. A really great film that works due to Poitier more than anything else. He carried what could have been a disappointing production into cinematic history. Arguably the best film of 1963, "Lilies of the Field" continues to be a funny, dramatic and heart-warming film nearly 40 years after its initial release. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
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9/10
Positive Movie
ThomasColquith31 December 2021
"Lilies of the Field" is a nice simple movie about Christian values of charity, working hard, and trusting in God for provision. It demonstrates that one man can make a big difference, but also that one man alone can't do it all, it often takes a village. Sidney Poitier even does a great rendition singing a gospel song. I rate it a 9/10, worth watching if you get the chance, though I may like it a little extra as it's about construction which I used to work.
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10/10
Amazing film
koofasa18 April 2021
It seems like anything I say about how great this movie is wouldn't be enough. Sidney Poitier was amazing as Smith/Schmidt the guy who gets dragged into building a church for a bunch of German nuns lead by an austere, never appreciative head nun of the help she receives. It is just a great film without violence, sex or mystery but is extremely captivating in every scene.
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7/10
There's nothing not to like.
labng5 November 2018
This is an old fashioned movie filled with the positivity that never goes out of style. The song singing scene is one of the most enjoyable things I've seen in ages. Sometimes it's nice to throw off the bad news of the day and watch something less world weary. This is just that kind of respite.
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10/10
Lilies of the Field
Scarecrow-8831 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Wonderful film, with an important role played by Sidney Poitier (who won the Oscar, in a role many might consider just as much a breakthrough as Jackie Robinson's in baseball) as a hardworking, and brilliant, passersby traveler sojourning through a desert community (film shot in Arizona) who has knowledge in construction, encountering East German nuns having "made it over the Berlin wall and all the way to the US", led by austere and linearly focused, Mother Maria (Lilia Skala, nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Oscar), who devotedly never gives up on God to deliver her a chapel-the running verbal gag is Poitier's Homer Smith's language barrier coming unstuck with the nuns, as "sha-pel" eventually becomes "cha-pel" and "sank you" finally becomes "thank you". Homer "Schmidt", at first, is "just passing through" but Mother Maria is undaunted in her belief that he was sent to them by God to build them a chapel, unwilling to argue with him about his leaving as soon as possible. His interest in actually building a chapel from the ground up (his dream of being an architect is finally put to the test for which, eventually and obviously, he will succeed) is what ultimately keeps him around. The beauty of the film is how fate (or God if you believe) brought Homer and the nuns together, and how they unexpectedly find common ground (and even get along despite their differences). The language barrier does work its charm, especially in moments where Homer helps them out with "sit down and stand up" or "phonograph record is black". His working for a foreman a couple days helps with groceries and goods so that he doesn't have to depend on very little from the nuns' vege-table garden. That foreman (impressed with Homer's work ethic and skills on the forklift and "digging machines"), a bar's drink and cook owner (the great Stanley Adams who doesn't believe necessarily but sees any help as "insurance" just in case there is an afterlife), and local Mexican laborers and their wives all decide to lend support to Homer even if he doesn't want it. Eventually Homer realizes (though he does pout about it and even sits out as the others take over!) that their help in completing the chapel is essential...and he soon functions as the foreman orchestrating a system that gives all of them a role to do. When the cross goes up at the end, Homer (often not as credited as God by Mother Maria) signs his name in the fresh cement...no one will know about it but Homer and the Almighty. Mother Maria, though, always gives God credit first, even as Homer is frustrated that she never seems to compliment his efforts and work involved. The tensions between Homer and Maria often result in arguments and back and forth contested verbal jousts. But by the end the chapel is built with no problems left for Mother Maria to complain about...an exhausted Homer assures her with each complaint it was taken care of.

Poitier's range is why he won the Oscar and how his character's race isn't as significant as his intelligence, work ethic, and capabilities to accomplish such a marvelous feat despite factors working against him is all the more noteworthy. The highs and lows of Homer as he builds the chapel and his relationships with those around him further more serve this film well. And his charisma and leading man star power are all the more noticeable here, only catapulting him into the upper echelon. With each film it seemed Poitier was establishing his status as an icon in cinema, perhaps not even realizing it (but I feel like he did) during the time. The Oscar perhaps was a sign, if anything, that he was breaking down barriers. But besides that, Poitier just provided us a real gem of a performance, an extremely likeable character to root for, and a success story who quietly moves on, leaving the nuns (and the priest who seemed to have lost faith in ever having a real parish to perform mass in) to their chapel. There's some fun banter about Baptist and Catholic differences and Poitier's doing things his way (sleeping as late as he desires, enjoying a good meal, embracing a ribald fiesta with his working locals) despite Maria's disagreements with him as highlights.

But, the film, above all, is just fun. It has plenty of ups and downs working against the chapel's being built, and the way Poitier is drawn to this project despite the setbacks makes the conclusion all the more satisfying.
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7/10
A nice film.
planktonrules22 May 2012
An out of work contractor (Sidney Poitier) happens upon an ODD group of nuns. After all, they are five East German nuns in the middle of the Arizona desert! While the nuns have no money and you have no idea why he stays, this Baptist man stays and helps them complete their chapel.

"Lilies of the Field" is a nice film filled with nice people doing nice things. It can't help but be a movie that people would enjoy, as it has a nice message and nice acting. However, I can't quite see why Sidney Poitier won the Oscar for Best Actor, as the film really didn't seem to take any risks and certainly won't offend. His performance was good but I think he certainly did a lot better, such as in "In the Heat of the Night" or "Edge of the City" or "Pressure Point"--all films which had a much riskier message and required more skill on Poitier's part. Mind you, I liked "Lilies of the Field"--I just didn't feel it was a particularly noteworthy film--though it is a nice family picture.
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8/10
funny and touching faith-based movie
SnoopyStyle18 January 2016
Homer Smith (Sidney Poitier) stops at a convent in the Arizona desert to get some water for his car on his way to the west coast and find some work. Mother Maria (Lilia Skala) leads four other Germanic Catholic nuns. They think he's been sent by God. With low funds, he decides to work a day for money. She sends him up to fix the roof. He does two days' work but when he tries to get paid, Mother Maria quotes the Bible, "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin. And yet I say unto you that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these." The nuns have no money and Homer is convinced to do more work. Eventually, he builds a chapel for the nuns and their poor Mexican migrant worshipers.

This is what faith-based movies should aim for. It is compelling. It is funny. Homer and Mother Maria are a funny comedy duo. At its core, this is powerful message of faith and goodness. Poitier wins the Oscar, the first competitive award for an African-American.
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6/10
Amen!
sddavis639 June 2011
This is a very pleasant movie. It's not a masterpiece. There have been better movies; there have been funnier comedies; there have been more dramatic dramas; there have been deeper explorations of spiritual issues. But this is a very pleasant movie to watch - and even fun at times.

This is Sidney Poitier's movie. He plays Homer Smith - a mysterious drifter whose past we never do learn very much about who appears at a farm needing water for the radiator in his car. The farm turns out to be occupied by a group of nuns who've recently come to the United States from Germany and who basically draft Homer to build them a chapel. The movie basically portrays the growing relationship between the nuns and Homer. Homer resents the work he's being asked to do but somehow is unable to pull away. The nuns see Homer as an answer to their prayers for someone who could help them in this task. It's good fun watching Homer teach the nuns how to speak English and how to sing some of the gospel songs he learned in his Baptist upbringing.

As I said, this is Poitier's movie and he was superb in it. The supporting cast was fine, but not high profile. The only one I recognized was Stanley Adams from a Star Trek episode a few years later. This might be a little bit over-rated, but still it doesn't disappoint. Again - it's a very pleasant movie to watch. (6/10)
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10/10
Simply an Inspiration.
ripondrxgrad8 June 2005
A classic in the deepest sense. No movie I have ever know has inspired more people to go and act on their beliefs. This movie inspires the deepest feeling of hope and faith. It proves that from almost nothing great things can happen. It makes you really believe everything has a purpose even the most unassuming situations as long as one keeps their mind and heart open. Albert Einstein would have LOVED this movie. It fits well with some of his theories on Life. Everything is a miracle in this movie. This is Sidney Poitier greatest work. He shows that even just traveling through life amazing things are always possible. Simple things like unemployment as the Mr. Smith finds out open avenues to adventures never even thought of. I would highly recommend everyone just to watch this movie at least one time in their life.
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7/10
The screen legend Sidney Poitier
Genkinchan9 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The first black man winning the lead acting category was a historical event

After hearing the news I started to watch a few of his work such as to sir with love 1&2

This movie can be seen as an exploitation movie for us now but back on the days can be summarised under gospel movies

The lord answering the nun prayer by sending someone to build his temple.

Sidney performance amazed me but other than that the story is not that impressive and other cast also felt mediocre.

Amen Amen Amen.
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3/10
Hasn't aged well
geoaar-119 January 2022
I remember seeing this film as a kid and mostly enjoying it. But after sitting through it again just a day or two ago, I was mostly disappointed. The writing and basic plot are just too lame to believe. This might pass as an episode for a weekly sitcom, but it's hardly noteworthy for the big screen. Were it not for it being one of Sidney Poitier's first big roles, I seriously doubt anybody would remember it. It's just too sappy and contrived and downright painful to watch at times.
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