Saturday, March 21, 2009

KNOWING

Are things preordained in our universe, or do things happen by chance? And what if we knew what laid ahead? Could we...or would we change things? These are the questions that the movie KNOWING asks.

We start in 1959, as elementary school children are about to fill a time-capsule with drawings of what they imagine 2009 might look like. One of the little girls, Lucinda, fills a sheet of paper with seemingly random numbers instead of drawing a picture. Later, after the ceremonial burying of the time-capsule, Lucinda disappears. Eventually, she is found in a closet in the school basement, scratching numbers into a doorway, afraid and talking about the "whisper people" that she hears.

Flash forward to present day. Nicolas Cage plays John, the widowed father of a young boy, Caleb. Caleb attends the very same elementary school at which the time capsule was buried. Since it is now 2009, the time-capsule is being dug up. Once its opened, the students are each given the drawings that the 1959 children created. Caleb gets Lucinda's paper. He is confused, but then suggests that it might be some sort of puzzle. He doesn't think too much about it though. However, one evening, after a few drinks, John starts to play with the numbers, and discovers that they are dates of major disasters, followed by the number of the death toll for each event. Disturbingly, there are three events listed that have yet to happen.

Up to this point in the movie, John has established himself as not believing in heaven, or life anywhere but on earth. His philosophy in life is that "____ happens", and that there is no meaning or predestination of events. But when the numbers fall into his hands, he begins to question whether or not that happened for a reason - especially after he finds himself at the exact spot of the next event. (this is the point where he realizes that the numbers also list the locations of each event) After that, he goes to the place of the next disaster to see if he can stop it from occurring.

Soon Caleb begins to hear the "whisper people", just as Lucinda had. They tell him that he can go with them if he wants. And these same mysterious strangers begin to show up at various places, watching and waiting. Meanwhile, John figures out that the last numbers written mean that the end of the world will soon arrive. So how do the numbers' predictions and the mysterious whisper people tie in with each other?

I don't want to ruin the whole movie for you if you're going to watch it, so suffice it to say that there is a lot of Christian symbolism here, but just inaccurate enough to make it weird. The movie was good - lots of action and suspense. The story was intriguing, but the ending was just strange enough to make you wonder if someone had read the bible, but wasn't really paying attention while they read.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

THE CHANGELING

change-ling (ˈchānj-liŋ ) 1. a child secretly exchanged for another

******

Based on a true story, this tragic movie stars Angelina Jolie as Christine Collins, the single mother of 10-year-old Walter. One evening, as she returns home from work, she discovers that Walter is missing. She searches everywhere for him. Frantic, she calls the police, who tell her there's nothing they can do until he's been missing for 24 hours. Eventually, the police begin their search for him. Five months later, a young boy fitting Walter's description is found, alive and well. Christine is told the good news! At the train station, she is "reunited" with a boy she does not recognize. She tells the police that it's not Walter. But the 1928 LAPD was desperate to revise its reputation of corruption, and feeling that this happy ending would be good for publicity, they tell her to take him home and "try him out" for a while. After all, he's been through quite an ordeal, and he has "changed". Shaken and confused, Christine gives in. But he is not her son. And when she insists on this fact, the PD tries to dismiss her as either a liar who's trying to shirk her responsibility as a mother, or a crazy woman. John Malkovich costars as a minister who speaks out publicly against the LAPD corruption. He helps her get her case against the PD together, but the soon the authorities have Christine committed. Eventually, a young cop comes across another young boy that leads him to find out what really happened.

Directed by Clint Eastwood, THE CHANGELING was based on the Wineville Chicken Coop Murders that took place in Riverside County, California. (Incidentally, Wineville is now Miraloma - the name of the community was changed due in large part to the negative publicity received from this case). Christine & Walter Collins were actual people. Most of the story is told as it actually happened, with the exception of some figures being left out, and some characters being a "complilation" of many figures involved. This was a good movie, but one of those that I wish I hadn't seen because the story was so tragic.

SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE

Oscar winner SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE hits the DVD aisle on March 31st. If you didn't catch it in the theater, make sure you watch it when the DVD drops.

The movie opens with a young man, Jamal Malik in jail. He's being tortured and beaten. The police want him to confess. They want to know exactly how he knew the answers! What Answers? Well, it seems that 18-year-old Jamal was a contestant on India's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. He's one question away from the big win. But he's been arrested for cheating because he's just an orphan from the slums of Mumbai. How could he possibly know anything, much less these challenging questions? But Jamal has a story to tell. He takes us back to his childhood and to specific events that reveal how he knew the answers. For each question, Jamal has a significant moment etched in his memory which, coincidentally, is key to each answer.

It was brilliant. I must admit, however, that I've had to digest it for a while before I came to that conclusion. When I watched it, I thought it was "good". But as I've thought about it - the story, the characters, the way the story was told, the cinematography, the acting - I've concluded that this was an excellent and unique film and deserving of the awards it received. The main story in itself is compelling. But there are so many twists and turns to Jamal's past, that we find ourselves invested in his life and how it turns out. Interestingly, it was almost released straight to DVD. Because it was so different, I'm sure it seemed like a risk. But they did take the risk and it paid off. SLUMDOG walked away on Oscar night with Eight Academy Awards.