|

Weather
missing? Click here


 
 






|

The
Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
May 19 - May 25, 2005 Edition
Web
Comments
- Email Submissions
Film
May
19, 2005
There is no new Film story this week.
Motherhood
off the map
May 5, 2005
By
Brooks Robards
A
delightful tribute to motherhood, released just in time for Mother's
Day, should, with luck, arrive in Island movie theatres this month.
Off the Map, directed by Campbell Scott and starring Joan
Allen, Sam Elliott, and Amy Brenneman, finds its paragon of motherhood
in a neo-hippie family based outside Taos, N.M.
The Groden family lives literally off the map, 10 miles
from civilization and without phone, electricity, or indoor plumbing.
Charley (Sam Elliott) and Arlene (Joan Allen) barter for what worldly
goods they need, home-school their 11-year-old daughter Cecilia Rose,
aka Bo (Valentina de Angelis), and savor the glories of the New Mexico
landscape, which if poles apart from the Vineyard is similarly idyllic.
Their annual income hovers around $5,000.
The catch is that Charley has gotten so depressed he can't do much
except cry. A man once able to fix anything and happy to have his
daughter trail along with him whether working or fishing, Charley
has become almost catatonic. While unfortunate, his condition will
not depress the moviegoer for long.
Arlene holds the family together, as well as the sometimes meandering,
slow-paced plot of the movie. Played by Allen with subtlety and assurance,
Arlene radiates a calm and thoughtfulness that, rather than becoming
saccharine, are grounded in her solid sense of self. She is utterly
unlike the more brittle Hollywood version of motherhood, currently
represented by the angry wife/mother she plays in The Up Side
of Anger, now in theaters.
Arlene treats her husband's illness with equanimity, good humor, and
inventiveness, warning him to tell her where he's going after she
wakes up to find him AWOL in the middle of the night, and carrying
on a one-sided conversation with him after he locks himself in the
family's outhouse.
Nor does Arlene fit the passive, saintly stereotype of motherhood.
She appreciates the growing resentments and sense of isolation of
her daughter, Bo, played with precocious skill by de Angelis. Arlene
quietly disputes Bo's disparagements of the family's friend George
(J. K. Simmons). When Bo runs off in a fit of anger, Arlene follows
and makes sure all is well. She takes her parenting seriously, rather
than trying to substitute friendship.
After I.R.S. auditor William Gibbs (Jim True-Frost) shows up, he discovers
Arlene buck naked in the garden, gets stung by a bee, and develops
a high fever that keeps him semi-comatose at the Grodens' home for
days. When Gibbs manages to get up again, he has fallen in love with
Arlene and found a new calling as an artist. No hot-blooded adultery
here: Arlene essentially ignores her houseguest's ardor. So much for
high-concept Hollywood plotting.
The intrinsically comic absurdity of the I.R.S. auditing a family
for making too little money keeps the viewer amused and curious about
what will happen among this odd assortment of people. It also offers
numerous gentle critiques of American culture. Many of them involve
the Grodens' daughter.
Bo is pictured reading such heavy tomes as, A History of Spain
at home, but she'd rather go to school like normal kids. She keeps
the family supplied with Moon Pies and similar goodies by writing
letters to the companies involved and complaining of a defect like
insect wings in the product. Her letters lead to the delivery of cases
of junk food as apologies.
The movie has a seventies feel in such tangible indicators as the
family's dumptique costumes and in the funky house where
they live. Use of narration by a grown-up Bo (Vineyard summer visitor
Amy Brenneman) contributes a feeling of nostalgia that helps consolidate
the plot but edges it towards sentimentality.
Off the Map will never win a Best-Picture Oscar nomination,
but its rewards, which have to do with the caliber of its acting and
its willingness to ignore cinematic formulas, are genuine. It's also
hard to imagine another movie where depression has been treated with
such laughable lightness.
When Bo finally receives the credit card she has applied for, the
results, which Vineyarders in particular may appreciate, are astonishing
and absurd. The Grodens are not like most American families, but Arlene,
their core and their glue, offers a tribute to mothers taken for granted
everywhere.
Brooks Robards has published 10 books, 3 of which are poetry, taught
film for 20 years at Westfield State College, and frequently writes
about film for The Times. |
| Send
this page to a friend:
|
|
©The
Martha's Vineyard Times 2005 - www.mvtimes.com
|
| |
|

|