Showing posts with label Religion and Spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion and Spirituality. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes by Chris Crutcher


 I pulled my paperback copy of this book of my shelf on impulse one day, and I'm very glad I did. 'Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes' is a compelling read, which examines a large birth of issues including bullying, obesity, disabilities, child abuse, abortion, and religion. This all sounds very 'disease-of-the-week,' but the 'problem novel' aspect of the novel is levied by genuine audacity and an unforgettable cast  of characters.

   Eric, called 'Moby' (as in the whale) for his considerable girth, is an obese seventeen-year-old boy living in a single-parent family. His oldest friend, Sarah Byrnes was horribly disfigured under suspicious circumstances when she was three. For seventeen years she has stood strong, but now she sits, wounded and silent, in a psychiatric ward.

   Eric is running out of time. He has to save Sarah Byrnes from insanity... or something worse. Because someone wants to silence Eric. And in this situation, there isn't a wide berth for error. Subplots involve   proselytization by Eric's Christian conservative classmate, a classroom discussion group dissecting relevant social issues, and a troubled and dimwitted boy from Eric's past.

   It might be hard to warm up to the characters at first. Eric is a unrepentant smartass who constantly describes his obesity and profuse perspiration at length, while Sarah Byrnes sometimes seems rougher (and meaner) than she needs to be. Likewise Steve Ellerby, Eric's other friend, seems to be someone who would pick any fight with a Christian. But slowly your views change- Eric is a devoted friend, Sarah is incredibly brave, and Ellerby is a thinker  who refuses to accept someone else's reality that doesn't make sense to him  as his own. Even crazy-religious and hypocritical Mark Brittain shows a human side.

   This in't the best written book ever- it contains a lot of cliched language. But the plot and the characters are engrossing. The story is exciting while also being interesting and not insulting the reader's intelligence. "Staying Fat For Sarah Byrnes" was actually banned/challenged at several points by the school systems, and a Wisconsin parents actually called it 'pornography' at one point, which is pure ridiculousness. It is actually a pretty mature book, but nothing that older teens can't handle in my opinion.

   This is a lot darker than the last YA book I read (the Trans-friendly "Parrotfish,") but then this arguably goes deeper into teen issues (not just GLBTQ issues.) I can't say I liked this one better, but then, they do different things well. For compelling characters and a steady mix of drama and action, look no further than "...Sarah Byrnes." I think you could get a tech-head  or jock boy who is committed to sports or glued to his video game system to read this book because it is so involving. I think it should be on every high school library shelf .
The book's intriguing dedication.


Saturday, December 28, 2013

Paradise: Faith (2012)

   What's impressive and surprising about "Paradise: Faith" is how it takes a sensational premise (a lonely woman with an erotic fixation with Jesus) and does not use it for cheap shock value or as a vicious attack on Catholicism. In fact, it's not really tawdry or sleazy at all- it, like it's desperate heroine, just is. I have not seen the first movie in the trilogy, the thematically linked "Paradise: Love," but after this movie I probably will.

   Instead of building contempt and hatred for it's fanatically religious protagonist, it develops it so that we feel a mix of curiosity and pity for strange, pious Anna-Maria (excellently played by Maria Hofstätter,) but never disgust or rage. She needs her faith desperately, as a human being needs food or oxygen.

 A single woman in her mid-50's, Anna-Maria works as a X-Ray Technician and spends her summers proselytizing the neighbors and no doubt making herself quite unpopular in her town in Austria. Anna-Maria is painfully sexually repressed and endures self-inflicted punishments for her unchaste thoughts. She fancies Jesus quite a bit and finds herself attracted to his gentle strength and kindness.

   Everything abruptly changes when Anna Maria's Arabic, paraplegic husband Nabil (Nabil Saleh) returns after a long, unexplained absence. Saleh is quite good too, developing his character from merely an annoyance to a cruel misogynist who spits on Anna Maria and mocks her passionate devotion to God. Nabil wants Anna Maria to 'fulfill her duties as a wife' and make love to him, but Anna Maria's only love now is God.

   What follows is a battle of wills- between the fanatical Anna Maria and the stubborn Nabil. No love and friendship comes out of this conflict- only violence and bitterness. Meanwhile Anna Maria copes with her impending crisis of faith and her complex feelings for her savior.

   "Paradise: Faith" is similar to the films of Michael Haneke in style- cold, unbiased, virtually devoid of music and littered with long takes. It interested me quite a bit. I hate the dumbing-down of the Christian in Hollywood, as even the craziest is a human being with complex motivations and belief system.

   The film doesn't give us a pat ending or anyone worth cheering for, and that's just fine- Anna Maria is greeted with mixed reactions from her herd of endangered souls. No one wins, no one 'proves her wrong,' and there are no revelations or messages except for this- crazy-devout religion can be a temporary aid for something deeper- unbearable loneliness, repression or isolation. Sometimes someone who seems proselytizing or arrogant is simply lonelier.

   Maria Hofstätter is just perfect as Anna Maria, and you can completely believe that she is this person, who she plays with total sincerity. It is interesting to see her try to 'save' the souls of her fellow man, and the way they react to what could be interpreted as a attempt to connect or or just pure  patronization. An essential art-house film for fans of the genre.
                                       Rating-
                                               8.0/10




Friday, October 25, 2013

Guest Post: Creation of Personal Reality by Eugenia Oganova




Each person perceives reality differently because each of us is unique (genetically, psychologically, emotionally, karmically).

Our personal reality is created through the way that we see life. It is based on previous experiences, beliefs we hold, cellular memory, subconscious influences from other lives and much more. And all of this is also affected by our current attitude, the lens through which we choose to view life. This lens triggers emotional responses, thoughts and actions. And since it is our reality, we then attract to us what resonates with our internal perceptions. This is how we create our personal reality:

Saturday, August 31, 2013

The Blackwater Gospel (2011)

Although this is a pretty obvious short on the evils of religion, the animation here is breathtaking, the visuals frightening, and the script, for the most part, is pretty damn good too.

   The angel of death, 'the undertaker,' is picking off the frightened residents of a small town, while the town's evil priest leads them on a witch hunt, leading to one man- the faithless, guitar-plucking hobo, who refuses to comply with the priest's reign of terror.

   The corpse-like characters are truly grotesque and frightening, scarier than anything Burton could come up with. The bloody conclusion isn't stylized or humorous either- it's unflinching brutality is unnerving. There's also some pitch-black humor concerning religious hypocrisy, but it does little to relieve the unrelenting tone.


Sunday, August 11, 2013

Antichrist (2009)


I was apprehensive about seeing "Antichrist,, but not primarily for the reason that you might expect. Yes, the film's allegations of rampant misogyny (not a new accusation for controversial filmmaker Lars Von Trier) and graphic violence were daunting, but I also heard that the Von Trier's new work was linked thematically to "Melancholia," a film I found almost unbearably aloof and pretentious.

   I am, however, a fan of the director's earlier works "Dancer in the Dark," and especially, "Breaking the Waves" (the film that made me fall irrevocably in love with Emily Watson), so I decided to  give this one a go. This movie didn't make me fall in love with anybody, least of all the characters (though the acting is very good.) It made me want to hit something. Or crawl into a fetal position and cry.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Film Review: Jude


In her ongoing quest to expose me to the most brutally depressing movies possible, a few weeks after persuading me to watch Tyrannosaur, my daughter Sarah introduced me to Jude. This adaptation of Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy features memorable performances by Christopher Eccleston (before he got a Tardis*), Rachel Griffiths (Hilary and Jackie), and Kate Winslet.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Repost of an Old Favorite: Buddy Boy

    Buddy Boy, Mark Hanlon's debut, is a haunting and potent film about dead end lives that provokes more questions than answers but remains bizarrely interesting throughout.
 
   The film provides a look into the surrealistic existence of emotionally stunted, stuttering misfit Francis (Aidan Gillen), who lives with his trollish invalid stepmother (actual amputee Susan Tyrell), in a squalid apartment.

   Suffering from overwhelming guilt concerning his sexuality, his religion, and himself, he goes to confession monthly, admitting every impure thought and indiscretion. The contrast between faith and the id is revealed in the opening, which presents the viewer with a montage of religious imagery followed by Francis, uh... pleasuring himself to a pair of voluptuous breasts in a magazine.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Interview With Khanh Ha Author of Flesh

Yesterday I discussed Flesh by Khanh Ha, which was a rare 5/5 star review for me. Today I am honored to welcome Khanh Ha to our blog to talk about his novel. He explores his own literary influences, how his family history provided fascinating stories to draw upon, and his own creative process.

About This Author: Khanh Ha was born in Hue, the former capital of Vietnam. During his teen years, he began writing short stories, which won him several awards in the Vietnamese adolescent magazines. He graduated from Ohio University with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism. Flesh is his first novel.


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Book Review: Flesh by Khanh Ha


Publication: 2012, Black Heron Press

Genre: Literary Fiction

FTC Info: I received a copy of this book from the author as part of a promotion through Virtual Author Book Tours.

Rating: 5/5 stars

Please visit tomorrow for my interview with Khanh Ha.


Saturday, December 8, 2012

Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux, as told through John G. Neihardt

Guest Post by Ernest Marshall 

Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux, as told through John G. Neihardt, University of Nebraska Press, 1961

Neihardt does a superb job of capturing Black Elk’s voice (his daughter served as stenographer and Neihardt was intimately acquainted with the culture of the Sioux).  One feels that Black Elk is speaking directly to the reader.  Part of this feeling probably comes from Black Elk’s simple and direct way of telling a story.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Book Review (Guest Post) The Trouble with Islam: A Muslim’s Call for Reform in Her Faith


 Guest Post by Ernest Marshall

The Trouble with Islam: A Muslim’s Call for Reform in Her Faith, by Irshad Manji, St. Martin’s Griffin, 2003

Ms. Manji’s book is both a heartfelt defense and scathing criticism of Islam.  To understand this, a bit of her background is helpful.

Of South Asian descent, she immigrated to Canada from East Africa when four years old, and was raised in a Muslim family in the midst of modern Western cultural values. There are over a billion Muslims worldwide; they are not all living in Middle Eastern countries. Part of her message is that the monolithic view of Islam is not just a common misperception of the West, but a mistaken and harmful mindset of most of the Muslim world.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Film Review: The Seventh Seal



A knight and his squire return from the crusades to find the Black Plague decimating the population. The knight, Antonious Block (Max von Sydow) struggles with questions about death, suffering, and the nature of God as he challenges Death to a game of chess.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Book Review: Annabel by Kathleen Winter

Publication Date: 2011

Publisher: Black Cat, Grove/Atlantic, Inc.

Format: Paperback

Genre:  Literary Fiction

Why I Chose It: Recommended by numerous bloggers, including Adam at Roofbeam Reader

Friday, October 26, 2012

Thoreau: A Voice for All Things Wild

Guest Post by Ernest Marshall

An awareness of nature pervades the written word, whether poems, essays, short stories, novels, or newspaper and magazine articles.  Here is an example at hand.  I finished the gripping conclusion to Mary Higgins Clark’s A Cry In The Night , my latest mystery, at about 2 a.m. this morning.  The opening paragraph of the concluding chapter reads like this:

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Requiem



     When it comes to rating movies, how should a film like Requiem be treated? Taken as entertainment, it is horrible. The viewer waits, sickened by the inevitable conclusion, but when it comes it is still like a poke in the gut. It is horrific, yet not horror, and shouldn't be advertised as "scary" in any conventional sense.

     But it strikes me as brave how directer Hans-Christian Schmid delivers his story -- sharp and gimmickless. His viewpoint is clear -- the girl was mentally sick. Nothing other than ignorance and her own mind conspired against her. Whether this notion would have helped anything remains distant.

     But the film doesn't need vomit or swiveling heads, shocks or hallucinations. It has Sandra Huller. Fully absorbed in her role, Sandra furiously portrays Michaela Klinglar, a character based, apparently, on a real German girl named Annalise Michaels, who lived in 1970's Germany.

    Michaela, as many young people would, hopes to leave her parents for college, and eventually, a career in teaching. She announces she will be leaving for university. She seems healthy and capable enough, but her mother speaks quietly and archaically of her illness and its eventual effect on her future.

     Michaela lives with three people, her parents and a younger sibling. Her mother coldly talks of her daughter's limitations in way that radiates cruelty, not care.  New clothes that show Michaela's figure are promptly thrown away in the night for being trampy. Even when her mother presents a gift, tension lies in the air.

     The girl's father secretly resents serving as his daughter's shield. But her mother relents, and she is given a chance to try a life of classes and socialization. The family is religious, as is Michaela, but at her school, belief in a higher power has gone out of style. Her mention of God is met by snickers. An at first aloof old classmate hangs around with her, as long as religion and self-help are not brought up, even with earnest intentions.

     When Michaela first begins to suffer seizures, black-outs, and hallucinations, she manages to cover up the incidents.  Her requests for help from a priest invoke less-than-helpful response. She begins going out with a boy who promises, when asked, to stand by her, foolishly ignoring the conditions.

     When her parents do discover her degeneration, they make the tragic decision to involve the church in her rehabilitation. While her stretches of coherency become rarer, she becomes a spiritual guinea pig for exorcisms and is denied the psychiatric care she so desperately needs.

     Two films have been made involving the case of Anneliese Michels, the other being a Hollywood courtroom thriller titled The Exorcism of Emily Rose, which concentrates on the supernatural aspects of the case.

      Schmid has no use for the superstition of the latter, but at times his stance becomes all-too-clear, involving overwrought scenes with a harsh priest and an earnest member of the church whose cure for insanity is a good round of bible study.

     Even as Requiem falters, Sandra Huller's intense performance, conveying the hope for normalcy and pain of rejection and illness, almost single-handedly keeps the viewer's interest. Some say the docu-style filming is boring, but I say it is a courageous attempt to strip Annalise's story to the basics, dropping the shocks and visualized nightmares that distract from the reality of the situation.

For more information on Anneliese Michels, check out this link (Spoilers!) here



Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Nothing Pink by Mark Hardy




Vincent is the only son of an evangelical minister, and every week his father invites parishioners to come down the aisle and be healed of their sins. Vincent has known since he was eight years old that he's gay, and he prays without ceasing to have this sin lifted from him. His parents seem to suspect. Yet while they are loving and affectionate parents, there's no possibility of them accepting this. And Vincent is sure these feelings growing inside him are a one-way ticket to Hell. Why hasn't God answered his prayer yet?

Then he meets Robert, another teen in his father's congregation. Attraction -- and eventually intimacy -- begin to blossom between them. Their relationship is innocent yet sexy, and it's very sweet. Their bond deepens, and when Vincent eventually gets his answer from God, it may be completely different from what he expected.

This is a very short novel but an emotional one, with plenty of descriptive detail. I really liked the fact that both homosexuality and Christianity were explored in a positive way, and the very strict fundamentalist brand of Christianity practiced by Vincent's parents was treated more respectfully than I'd expected. It does a good job of delving into how a gay teen might begin to reconcile his sexuality and his faith. And I like the nurturing, unconditionally loving perception of God and the message that "God is a lot bigger than the church."

There are a few aspects of the novel that disappointed me. The story moves slowly, but it's very short; although I came to care about Vincent and Robert, there wasn't room for deep character development. In a sense, the story and characters seemed like a sketch, without the details and colors filled in. And the narrator subscribes to many gay male stereotypes -- limp wrists, dressing in pink, and fussing with hair and clothes. At first, it lent a touch of dry humor, but at moments I found it a little bit annoying. I waited for him to move past that, and I didn't see it happen. Maybe it's because this is a story of the very early stages of coming out and understanding ones sexual identity.

Overall, this was well done, though it felt unfinished to me, and it had some beautiful moments. I think many young adults will enjoy this novel, and it will especially appeal to religious gay teens.

**Note: This novel is set in the 1970s -- here I go past trippin' again! :-) I'm going to need some time to decompress from the 8-track tapes, feathered hair, and Linda Ronstadt hot pants. And especially all that Barry Manilow!

Read More Reviews: Becky's Book Reviews; Lucy Was Robbed


Rating: 3.5


5- Cherished Favorite4 - Keep in My Library3 - Good Read2 - Meh1 - Definitely Not
For Me

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

In The Bedroom by Andre Dubus With Movie Tie In

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Introduction In the Bedroom is a collection of short stories by Andre Dubus. Sarah and I read "The Killings" and watched the movie adaptation of that short story, titled In the Bedroom, as part of our ongoing study of short stories and cinema. By then, I was hooked, and I read the rest of the short stories in the collection. Wow! I'll discuss the entire collection and the movie later in this post. In "The Killings" (excerpt here) a young man is murdered. This is not a spoiler, because we're told this in the first line of the story. His father focuses on revenge, which doesn't give him the closure -- or the release from his anger -- that he'd hoped for. It's a dark, disturbing story that offers no redemption and no easy answers. Sarah called it an "anti-redemption" story.

Andre Dubus Dubus (pronounced so it rhymes with "excuse") is a fascinating author. Violence and tragedy, particularly gun-related violence, are tremendously important themes in his work. His sister was raped when she was young. This triggered years of terror over his loved ones' safety. Dubus carried guns to protect himself and those around him, until one night, in the late 1980s, he almost shot a man in a drunken argument outside a bar. In his New Yorker essay "Giving up the Gun," he describes that night as a turning point -- after that, he wisely decided to stop arming himself.

Dubus spent six years in the Marine Corps, achieving the rank of captain, and earned an MFA in Creative Writing. In 1986, he was seriously injured in a car accident. He stopped to help two injured people, Luis and Luz Santiago. As he helped Luz to the side of the highway, an oncoming car swerved and hit them. Luis was killed instantly, and Luz survived because Dubus pushed her out of the way.

Dubus was critically injured, and later had his left leg amputated above the knee. He used a wheelchair for the rest of his life. He struggled with constant pain and debilitating depression. And his third wife left him, taking their two young daughters. However, his experiences with his disability led to his becoming a more prolific writer, as well as a successful professor and lecturer, and it deepened his religious faith. He died of a heart attack in 1999.

(Sources: Wikipedia article; Spiritus Temporis article)

The In the Bedroom Collection

In Dubus's biography, one finds many of the themes reflected in the stories in In the Bedroom: relationships, love, fatherhood, divorce, religion -- specifically Catholicism -- guilt, and the unsatisfied yearning for redemption.

 Most of these stories are primarily character-driven. Plots seem to rise casually from the character descriptions; it's a bit like a story overheard in a bar. At times, readers are lulled by the gently unfolding character development, then we're slammed into a brick wall when a shocking event occurs.

Dubus writes in a unique style, with long, rambling run-on sentences which would have me pulling my hair out if I found them in my students' work. :-) However, this style fits his stories, which have a strong introspective quality. It's not stream of consciousness -- it's often not even written in first person -- but it's something close. And I soon adapted to his style and grew to love it.

The thing I like best about his work was the way he creates characters who are deeply flawed, yet worthy of compassion and respect. The two stories I found the most compelling, "Rose" and "A Father's Story," were agonizing for the same reason they were powerful. I saw the main characters doing, or not doing, things that were horrifying and unthinkable, yet at the moment, I completely understood why they acted as they did.

Dubus's probing but compassionate eye for his characters and his honest exploration of love, sexuality, and spirituality are, above all, what make these works unforgettable for me. He also used imagery skillfully. With a few expertly crafted lines, he could clearly conjure a landscape or connect me to the rhythms of nature. And glimpses of nature, particularly the ocean, often appear in metaphors. There were many times when I stumbled on a gorgeous passage that I wanted to tuck away, like a jewel, to admire later.

More About the Stories "Killings" -- As I mentioned, this story is about a bereaved father's quest for revenge. God, this is a heart-wrenching story, and you scarcely even know the characters, nor do you see the bloodshed. Grief and revenge are powerful themes. Dubus's exploration of grief, along with his reflections on marriage and fatherhood, are what I loved best about the story, and they are among the things he does best.
It seemed to Matt ... that he had not so much moved through his life as wandered through it, his spirit like a dazed body bumping into furniture and corners. He had always been a fearful father: when his children were young, at the start of each summer he thought of them drowning in a pond or the sea, and he was relieved when he came home in the evenings and they were there; usually that relief was his only acknowledgment of his fear, which he never spoke of, and which he controlled within his heart ... and then he lost Frank the way no father expected to lose his son, and he felt that all the fears he had borne while they were growing up, and all the grief he had been afraid of, had backed up like a huge wave and struck him on the beach and swept him out to sea. (p. 11)
"The Winter Father" --
The Jackman's marriage had been adulterous and violent, but in its last days, they became a couple again, as they might have if one of them were slowly dying. (p. 24))
This begins a story of a newly divorced father of two young children who struggles to adapt to his changed role in the kids' lives. He feels the divorce has "pierced and cut" his time with the kids, and he finds any moments of silence between him and his children painful, so he fills their time with entertainment: movies, museums, and aquariums. As a newly single man, he also comes to a new understanding of his sexual and emotional needs. This story explores parenthood, intimacy, loneliness, and regret. It also touches lightly, but powerfully, on the theme of guilt, an inevitable emotion at the end of a marriage.
Crossing the sidewalk to his car, in that short space, he felt the limp again, the stooped shoulders. He wondered if he looked like a man who had survived an accident which had killed others. (p. 26)
One of Dubus's gifts is to avoid the temptation to give his characters a Road to Damascus-like moment of revelation or an easy solution to their problems, yet he does show them some kindness and compassion. "The Winter Father" offers no moment of resolution and closure, but it does allow the father to gradually begin growing toward a sort of peace.

 "Rose" -- This story begins with a 51-year-old man ruminating as he frequents a neighborhood bar. We come to know the narrator, an intelligent, articulate ex-military man, then we realize he has come to us primarily as a storyteller. He guides us into a story told to him in the bar by Rose, a worn down working class woman with a broken spirit.
And in Rose's eyes, I saw embers of death, as if the dying of her spirit had come not with a final yielding sigh, but with a blaze of recognition. (p. 61)
I will leave you to discover Rose's tragic story for yourself. It's a tale of how a woman loses her power and even her awareness of her own love, but it's also about how people, including Rose, discover hidden reservoirs of strength, at critical moments, that they never knew they had. The narrator sees her with respect and compassion, even though she can't see herself in this light. It's also a story that explores the intersection between religious belief and real life, and the search for meaning or lack of it, important themes in Dubus's work.
Devout Catholics, she told me. By that, she did not mean they strived to live in imitation of Christ. She meant they did not practice artificial birth control, but rhythm, and after their third year of marriage they had three children. They left the church then ... I am not a Catholic but even I see they were never truly members of that faith, and so could not have left it. There is too much history, too much philosophy involved, for the matter of faith to rest finally and solely on the use of contraceptives ... They had neither a religion nor a philosophy; like most people I know, their philosophies were simply their accumulated reactions to their daily circumstance, their lives as they lived them from one hour to the next. They were not driven, guided by either passionate belief or strong resolve. And for that I pity them both, as I pity the others who move through life like scraps of paper in the wind. (pp. 64-65)
"The Fat Girl" -- A slightly obese young woman's sense of identity, and her expectations of her life, evolve as she loses and gains weight.  

"Delivering" -- A pre-teen boy goes through daily routines with his younger brother, occasionally showing a bit of cruelty, after the violent break-up of his parents' marriage.

"A Father's Story" -- This is a tale of love, guilt, and forgiveness, and it's also a story about finding meaning in quotidian life. A divorced father is driven to make a difficult choice to protect his adult daughter. I will leave you to discover it for yourself. I will just add that it delves heavily into religion and spirituality, and I enjoyed the Catholic narrator's perspective on religion, which combines a love of ecclesiastical rituals with a rejection of the material trappings of organized religion.
For ritual allows those who cannot will themselves out of the secular to perform the spiritual, as dancing allows the tongue-tied man a ceremony of love. (p. 119) Certainly the ushers who pass the baskets know me as a miser. Father Paul ... could say Mass in my barn. I know this is stubborn, but I can find no mention by Christ of maintaining buildings, much less erecting them of stone or brick, and decorating them with pieces of metal and mineral and elements that people still fight over like barbarians. (pp. 114-115)
"All the Time in the World" -- A young woman searches for an adult relationship and discovers both the joys and limitations of a culture revolving around casual sex.

The Cinematic Connection  This is the first full-length film Todd Field directed, and it is a good one, though not for the faint of heart. In this adaptation of "Killings," which is a very short piece, the original story and characters are changed and expanded to fit a feature length movie. And the focus of the story changes from being about a father's choices and internal struggle to being about the relationship between him and his wife.

 

As Roger Ebert said, in his 4-star review:
The film unfolds its true story, which is about the marriage of Matt and Ruth--about how hurt and sadness turn to anger and blame. There are scenes as true as movies can make them, and even when the story develops thriller elements, they are redeemed, because the movie isn't about what happens, but about why.
This movie shines, partly due to great performances by Tom Wilkinson, Sissy Spacek, and Marisa Tomei. Have I mentioned that Tom Wilkinson is one of my favorite actors in the world? This isn't the kind of fast paced movie you'd expect from Hollywood. It movies slowly through vibrant images, that give you hints as to what lies beneath the surface, and it reveals the characters in quiet, everyday moments. This is true to the introspective, character driven quality of Dubus's stories and his deft use of imagery, which I described above. On the other hand, it is a violent, disturbing movie, though not gratuitously so, and it will keep you on the edge of your seat!

Rating: 4.5


5- Cherished Favorite4 - Keep in My Library3 - Good Read2 - Meh1 - Definitely Not
For Me