A
Map of the World Movie Review:
A
Map of the World is an example of a truly adult drama. Unlike
a lot of other dramas, even good ones, which feature popular
stars (and which cost more and make more money than this
one), this film is very complex in its characterizations,
and mature and frank in its subject matter. When I refer
to 'complex', I don't just mean the good kind of complexity
with delightful twists and what have you, but the yucky
kind as well in which the viewer may start doubting and
questioning our protagonists in ways that, for some viewers,
may be very upsetting. And the subject matter is pretty
disturbing as well.
Sigourney
Weaver, Julianne Moore and David Strathairn star in a story
which brings up some of the absolute worst nightmares ever
imagined by a family with children, yet is depicted with
little overt melodrama. Weaver and Strathairn farm, and
Weaver is also the school nurse, who has one particularly
nasty child whose mother clearly does not take very good
care of him, and on the last day of school, Weaver calls
her up on that. As usual, this bad parent says to the nurse
that it is none of her business how she raises her child.
A
few days later, Weaver watches Moore's children for the
day, and tragedy strikes. One of Moore's little girls goes
missing before a planned swim in the lake. To her horror,
Weaver discovers the child floating, face down, in that
very same lake. The daughter is rushed to hospital, her
parents hold a bedside vigil, but nothing can be done, and
the child dies from severe brain damage. Of course, the
girl's parents are devastated, but Weaver is at least as
devastated, so much so that this energetic, driven woman
is reduced to someone who can barely get out of bed in the
morning.
Eventually,
she does get out of bed, only to get arrested. The mother
of the nasty child has her arrested for child abuse. It
seems outrageous that this woman, who appears a very unlikely
candidate to commit the kind of abuse described, is abruptly
dragged off to prison to await trial. But what this event
does is change everything, from the opinions of people in
the town, to the dynamics within the family.
For
the small town, the abuse charge seems to have flowed naturally
from the tragic event beforehand (a number of people ignore
her and talk about her behind her back during and after
the girl's funeral), and, as well, it is clear to the audience
that much of the reason this abuse charge even came about
is because the mother now has the ammunition to get back
at Weaver's holier-than-thou attitude. For the family, it
is also troubling, because all of the family members are
ostracized by the town, and the dynamics within the family
change as well. The father, who before was rather distant,
is forced to do all the things that he left to his wife.
He also, I think, seems to have doubts, at first, about
his wife's innocence and state of mind, when she attempts
to distance herself from the reality of the charges against
her by trying to act cheerful and motherly when talking
to him in the prison. Weaver herself suffers because she
is thrown into jail with women who are intellectually and
morally depraved, including her cellmate, who drowned her
two newborn twins, because they were born black from a black
father (I`m wondering about the whole logic of that crime,
but I guess this kind of crime isn't exactly logical!).
On the legal and courtroom front, Weaver is represented
by a lawyer who treats everything as a diseased form of
human comedy.
The
acting of the two lead actresses are wonderful in their
own unique ways. Julianne Moore has the much smaller role,
but gives probably the most emotionally charged moment,
in a scene by the lake in which she tells Weaver of her
fear that she would not remember much about her dead daughter
only to discover that she remembered a lot more than even
she imagined. She is also very interesting in that she never
once doubts Weaver or gets back at her for anything, even
when one would say she has more reason to be bitter than
the rest of the town.
Weaver
has the more difficult role, which may upset some viewers.
There is much ambiguity in her character; the truth is that
a child did die in her care, even if it was mostly assuredly
an accident. There are a number of strange, enigmatic flashbacks
involved the alleged child victim which some viewers may
question, expecting that perhaps there is a somewhat valid
reason to the abuse charges. But most importantly, Weaver's
character is a stubborn and possibly arrogant woman. She
is burdened with a crippling guilt when her perfectionism
is punctured in the most horrific way. She can go around
saying that some parents are bad and that their children
are threatened, but her own homelife isn't much better,
with a daughter who constantly tells her she hates her,
and a husband who seems indifferent to anything that does
not involve the farm. But, at the same time, the fact is,
there is a difference when a mistake is made out of carelessness,
or just plain fate, and when a person deliberately, and
malicouslessly commits a horrible act, and it is not fair
for the town to automatically believe that one is the same,
or the cause of, the other, and it isn't fair to take advantage
of other people's mistakes for personal gain.
A
Map of The World is a great, if long, drama for those who
are willing to wade into depressing waters, and to face
the hard truths about the complexities of people and the
repercussions of actions and events upon those people. It
contains great performances, including one by Sigourney
Weaver which proves that she can do much more than battle
aliens if given the chance.
David
Macdonald
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