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The Sweet Hereafter
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Directed by Atom Egoyan.
Atom Egoyan's haunting adaptation of the Russell Banks novel The Sweet Hereafter was the Canadian filmmaker's most successful film to date, taking home a Special Grand Jury Prize at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival and scoring a pair of Academy Award nominations, including "Best Director." Restructured to fit Egoyan's signature mosaic narrative style, the story concerns the cultural aftershocks which tear apart a small British Columbia town in the wake of a schoolbus accident which leaves a number of local children dead. Ian Holm stars as Mitchell Stephens, a big-city lawyer who arrives in the interest of uniting the survivors to initiate a lawsuit; his maneuvering only drives the community further apart, reopening old wounds and jeopardizing any hopes of emotional recovery. Like so many of Egoyan's features, The Sweet Hereafter is a serious and painfully honest exploration of family grief; no character is immune from the sense of utter devastation which grips the film, not even the attorney, whose interests are in part motivated by his own remorse over the fate of his daughter, an HIV-positive drug addict. A sobering, beautifully-realized examination of the ties that bind -- and which can be severed at any time. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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radiogerbilradiogerbil Haunting and Powerful
by radiogerbil in radiogerbil Blog
loved it.
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"“The Sweet Hereafter” is an exquisitely crafted film in which pain and loss reign supreme when a small town loses most of their children to a devastating bus accident. Shortly thereafter, a driven attorney arrives and tries to reopen their pain and stir their grief into a class-action lawsuit against the bus manufacturer. The lone survivor of the accident, a teenage girl, narrates the film by using the fable of the Pied Piper as the framework for the film’s events. The story is told in three simultaneous narrative streams that deftly weave together to form a beautiful narrative. The backstory of how the accident happened forms the first stream while the aftershock and lawsuit forms the second. The third stream is quite enigmatic and is never resolved but provides much depth to the life of the attorney and shows why he does what he does. Ian Holm is fantastic as the seemingly amoral attorney who drives the parents into a frenzy of revenge, but his characte ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Rarely has a film offered a more haunting, poignant look at the aftermath of a tragedy than director Atom Egoyan's The Sweet Hereafter, skillfully adapted from Russell Banks' novel of the same name. As the class-action lawyer who may be motivated by his own concerns, Ian Holm aids the director immensely with his complex, sympathetic performance. Egoyan's unparalleled visual aptitude is in full flourish: the chilly Canadian landscape is a character unto itself, and the director renders the tragic accident in a haunting, non-manipulative manner. Some objected to the downplaying of the novel's incest subplot, and the film's nonlinear, deliberate pace may not be to all tastes. As a delicate, challenging study of pain, grieving, and healing, The Sweet Hereafter is a singular moviegoing experience. ~ Matthew Doberman, All Movie Guide
 



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