Although things have improved greatly, when this film was made
during the early nineties, rape often went unreported. Making
a statement against letting sleeping dogs lie, A Reason to Believe
makes a strong stance against the abuse of women and almost
makes a strong stance on women’s rights as well, falling
short only because of hypocrisy.
Charlotte is dating
a guy in a fraternity and has gotten to know all of his friends
well, so when he leaves town for a funeral, she naturally assumes
that she will still be safe at a party in his fraternity. When
one of her boyfriend’s fraternity brothers rapes her at
the party she feels ashamed and tells nobody. When her boyfriend
returns he finds out and turns his back on her. Finally she
decides to come forward and bring charges against the guy, which
also attacks the fraternity as well. Soon all of her friends
have turned on her and the only people on her side are the women’s
rights group on campus, who are merely using her to take down
the fraternity.
A Reason to Believe
is a straightforward drama with little else to offer, making
it difficult not to expect the film to feel like a TV special.
Somehow it holds, however, never seeming too cliché or
trite. One of the elements of the film which bothered me the
most also helped to make it more dimensional and real. The women’s
rights group wanted desperately to let everyone know that they
had the right to do whatever they wanted, but at the same time
they would not allow Charlotte the simple right of making the
choice to come forward on her own. They pressured her into it,
eventually leaking the story into the school newspaper just
to force her into the spotlight. They had no concern for Charlotte’s
individual rights even though that is what they claim to be
defending the entire film.
There are many other
interesting questions in the film, all concerning truth, loyalty,
and choices. Much of the struggle seems to come in Charlotte’s
decision, but there are other people who know she is telling
the truth and choose not to come forward. Others simply lie
in the rapist’s defense. Charlotte quickly learns who
her true friends are, and how few of them there really are.
The other good thing about this film is its willingness to allow
things to end unfinished. It understands that rape is not something
that simply disappears regardless of how the person was punished.
With a surprisingly
large amount of special features for a film this old and small,
A Reason to Believe is a rarity among new-to-DVD releases. There
are ten minifeaturettes, documenting the making of the film
and examining the rape issue further.