By James Bowman on 2.26.07 @ 12:02AM
It comes to us from Fox Faith, a new label from Fox Faithless.
The Last Sin Eater comes to us from something called
"Fox Faith," a new label from Fox Faithless (as perhaps we should
now call it) designed to market a new product line to Christian
movie-goers who have been underserved (when not actually insulted)
by the mainstream Hollywood studios. I'm afraid they may not feel
that they are a lot better off if this movie is the kind of thing
they can expect from Fox Faith. If I had been advising Michael
Landon Jr., who directed, or Brian Bird who joined him in adapting
the novel by Francine Rivers, I would have advised them to go all
out for the fairy tale. As it is, they allow their fairy tale to
get mixed up with a realistic narrative. The two step all over each
other's toes and come crashing down in a tangled heap together.
Part of the problem is that, on the one hand, the film is
weirdly specific as to the time and place of its setting, which is
Appalachia in 1850, and on the other hand it is quite obviously set
in Never Neverland. Not only does the landscape not look like
Appalachia -- the movie was shot in Utah -- but the people don't
look or talk like people from Appalachia. Supposedly a community of
Welsh farmers who have settled in this "cove" -- surely this is an
interloping term from the littoral and not native to the
Appalachian "hollers" -- a generation ago, they seem never to have
encountered any Americans, except a few Indians, on the way.
Moreover, these alleged Welshmen and women have Scottish, Irish or
Dutch surnames and speak an otherworldly brogue which is not
consistent but which has traces of Irish and Scottish in it and few
to none of Welsh. Even the children, born and raised here, speak
like this.
Most curiously, so far from being chapel-goers like the actual
Welsh, none of them appears ever to have heard of Christianity or
of Jesus Christ except as an expletive. Instead, they practice a
weird religion of their own that is said to have come down to them
from their ancestors back in Wales. The community chooses by lot a
"Sin-eater" from among its members. Thereafter, the Sin Eater is
required to go live apart from everybody else, in a cave on Dead
Man's Mountain, and to wear a spooky-looking black cloak and hood.
He must never be seen by anyone in the community again. When
someone dies, a relative rings the passing bell and the neighbors
gather at night-time by the grave-side. Having laid a shroud over
the body, they put some bread and a skin of wine on it, then all
turn their backs as the Sin Eater arrives, eats the bread and
drinks the wine, and pronounces a sort of absolution over the
corpse.
One day an 11-year-old girl, Cadi Forbes (Liana Liberato), who
eaten up with guilt for (as she thinks) killing her little sister,
goes in search of the Sin Eater. "I can't live my whole life with
what I have done," she tells Louise Fletcher -- once Nurse Ratched
but now the sweetest little old lady you'd ever want to meet.
Accompanied by a neighbor boy (Soren Fulton) and a clearly angelic
imaginary friend called Lilybet (Thea Rose), she sets out in search
of the Sin Eater to force him to eat her sins before she
dies -- a thing which has never been thought of heretofore.
Left it at that, the movie might have done well enough as a sort
of parable, set in a parallel universe, where the eternal drama of
sin and redemption is repeated with different dramatis personae
from those we are familiar with. Instead it veers into a mistaken
literalism as Cadi's quest brings to light the dark secrets
surrounding the appointment of the Sin Eater and the guilty memory
of the atrocity that the community has been living with but hiding
from for 20 years.
Such a realistic drama superimposed on the fairy tale only has
the effect of making everything look hopelessly unreal. And then,
on top of that, a "Man of God" (Henry Thomas) appears among them to
teach them that "the original Sin Eater" did his job 19 centuries
before -- a bit of information which, along with the Bible he
leaves with them, turns all the little "cove" of heathen Welsh into
good Baptists with the old Sin Eater -- now, by the way, reunited
with the lady-love who has waited for him through all the
sin-eating years -- as the new Pastor. I don't know whether this
ending will satisfy and uplift the Christian audience that Fox
Faith is catering for, but I can't see it doing much business
beyond it.
topics:
Business, Religion, Hollywood