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Harrison's
Flowers Movie Review:
This
could be considered a good period piece as the trials of
Slobodan Milosevic head the national papers. He was formerly
the president of Yugoslavia. He is accused of over 600 Kosovo
Albanians deaths. If you have been living in a shell he
is currently on trial for crimes against humanity, and war
crimes during his reign as president.
That is what this movie has a big part of it's focus on.
It is extremely graffic. When Sarah Lloyd (Andie MacDowell)
finds out that her husband Harrison (David Strathairn) is
presumed dead in a far away country she uses shear guts,
and determination to find him. Harrison is an award winning
photojournalist who is on assignment a lot. Feeling like
he hasn't spent appropriate time with his kids he decides
to take one more assignment. When he is asked to go to cover
the escalating violence in the Serbo-Croatian War he doesn't
hesitate to fullfill his duty. The film focuses on too many
issues, and loses its direction trying to accomadate both
the love story or the terrible atrocities. Does this film
want to be a film about endearing love? Or does it want
to say something about the ethnic cleansing that it so visibly
shows? French director Elie Chouraqui does an above average
job portraying the horror's of the war very realistically,
but fails to be convincing on the side of love. The main
question that could be asked is how could anybody search
for a loved one while such atrocities were going on around
them? How could she (Sarah Lloyd) convince Harrison's associates
to risk life, and limb to search for him? The answer is
that Sarah doesn't seem to have what it takes, she doesn't
seem to have the backbone necessary to do such things.
Andie Macdowell star of such films as Sex, Lies, and Videotape
seems more slated for romantic film, which this theatrical
release takes a stab at. It falls short of convincing on
that aspect. If the relationship was to be believable it
should have built upon their relationship more, before he
goes off missing. It reminds me of Pearl Harbor where you
have a love story messing up what it really should have
been about. The movie is slow throughout, but picks up speed
when you see the scenes of the ethnic cleansing. The scenes
are very graffic, and makes a fine point of the sickness
that had overtaken the nation. This is a film that has some
heart to it, and really could have made a statement about
the problems in Yugoslavia, but misses.
Sean Chandler
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Harrison's Flowers
Info:
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Harrison's
Flowers Directed By:
Elie Chouraqui
Harrison's Flowers Written By:
Elie Chouraqui, Didier LePecheur, Isabel Ellsen, Michael
Katims
Harrison's Flowers Cast:
Marie Trintignant, Alun Armstrong, Christopher Clarke,
Andie MacDowell, David Strathairn
Buy
Harrison's Flowers on DVD U.S.
Buy Harrison's Flowers on DVD U.K.

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Reviewed
by:
Sean Chandler
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