VIBING REVIEW
RACING DAYLIGHT | RACING DAYLIGHT |
|
|
|
| Written by Deborah Ground Buckner | |
|
Studio: Watershed Works Principal actors: David Strathaim, Melissa Leo, Leclanche Durand , Jason Downs Director: Nicole Quinn Screening Date: September 17, 2007 Kansas International Film Festival (World Premiere) Film length: 85 minutes Rating: unrated 4 Stars Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner Writer and director Nicole Quinn tells a haunting Southern story in Racing Daylight. The film is three short films together, each presented from a different viewpoint. When they are viewed in their entirety, they become pieces of an intricate puzzle uncovering a story of lost love and attempts to regain it in another lifetime. In Sadie, Sadie Stokes (Melissa Leo) has returned to Cedar County to care for her Grandma (Leclanche Durand) nearing the end of life. “There have always been Stokes' in Cedar County,” but Sadie and Grandma are the end of the line. Sadie has a crush on Henry (Academy Award-nominated David Strathaim), her grandmother's handyman, but she can't get a word out in his presence. One night, Sadie sees a face in her mirror, a man who calls “Anna!” then disappears. Sadie learns the gossip of her ancestor, Anna, who left her husband, Edmund, and their son to run away with Edmund's cousin, Harry. Anna begins to take possession of Sadie, bringing out a new side who shops for fashionable clothing and becomes the aggressor in her relationship with Henry. The second film of the trilogy is Edmund. Set in Civil War time, the costumes and settings recreate the period, nicely aided by haunting fiddle music. Edmund's story of life without Anna is told, as he lives with his mother and young son. Just as Sadie, in the present time, found herself haunted by spirits of the past, Edmund, in the past, is haunted by Sadie's return to the present time, seeing glimpses of Anna in her movements. The concept that different times exist simultaneously and face these intersections is enthralling. The third film, Henry, returns to present day and gives Henry an opportunity to relate his feelings for Sadie and his observations of her behavior as Anna casts her spells. David Strathaim's portrayal is wonderful, bringing a gentle, but intelligent folksiness to Henry whose quiet life of labor and memorizing Civil War facts is turned upside. Without announcing from the beginning it is a mystery, the film becomes one, gradually fitting together the clues and culminating in a moment of resolution and redemption. It is a moving experience, a mix of pathos and humor, just as life has always been through the ages. |
| Next > |
|---|
| ARTS & CULTURE BOOKS FILM MUSIC THEATRE |
| BOOK REVIEWS |
| FILM REVIEWS |
| MUSIC REVIEWS |
| CONCERT REVIEWS |
| THEATRE/ARTS & CULTURE |
| CURRENT DVD RELEASES |
| CURRENT MUSIC RELEASES |
| VIBING REVIEW |
|
DIGG IT? |
|
CONGRATULATIONS!
charles
Ohio, USA
A 'n E VIBE Prize Pack WINNER!
Register with AnEVibe
to win Contests,Prize Packs & More! |
BATMAN (since 1939)
"The Bat-Man" has been going for almost seventy years now, and he doesn't look a day over marketable! Even my terrifying fear of real bats does not dissuade me from the allure of the caped crusader. Bruce Wayne, in super hero attire or not, seems to have it all; with his good looks, inherited wealth, charm, charisma and some suped-up cars. Of course, Christian Bale takes up the torch for the next generation formidably well in The Dark Knight coming to theatres this week.
|