The Sweet Hereafter

Reviewed by: CalGal

March 30, 1999

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I avoided this movie for a long time, on the grounds that if the reviews upset me, the movie was certain to destroy me. Bad call on my part. A haunting, beautiful, bleak film about loss and grief, Hereafter doesn't hit you over the head with the pain it portrays. Somehow that makes it a bit easier to witness.

The story is uncomplicated, if not simple: A school bus in a small Canadian town slides off a highway in the dead of winter and crashes into the ice, killing 14 of the town's children. A lawyer (Ian Holm) comes to town to convince the parents to sue...who? Whoever can pay. All he has to do is convince a number of the parents to sue, and he'll find a responsible party. You settle back for a cautionary note about ambulance chasers. And yet one look at the lawyer tells you he's not interested in money, but in payment. Because payment must be made. Children have been lost. (The lawyer has a cellular phone dedicated to receiving calls from a lost child of his own, his heroin-addicted daughter; the conversations are grueling reminders that he makes his payment, too.)

Hereafter floats between three timelines and tells the tale from three POVs. A teenage girl, Nicole--one of the few survivors in the crash, who is affectionate, responsible, talented, and seemingly unaffected by a sexual relationship that is presented almost without comment. A widowed father (Bruce Greenwood), who witnesses the accident. And the lawyer, who convinces most of the town's parents (save Greenwood) to sign up in the search for blame. The story moves easily between the days immediately before and after the accident, as well as two years in the future, when Holm meets a friend of his daughter's while on a flight home.

The denouement is quiet, but provides a small portion of emotional relief as you realize that one person, at least, has extracted payment (and no, I haven't given anything away). And while the bus crash itself is horrifying, the most excrutiating moment in the movie, for me, is Greenwood's two small nods.

There really isn't much more to the story than that; this is a movie of small moments and perfect performances. Greenwood and Sarah Polley (as Nicole) are remarkable. And how the Academy managed to overlook Holm last year is more than I can understand.

Anyway. If you've been avoiding The Sweet Hereafter for some of the same reasons I have--gut it up. It isn't as excrutiating as you're expecting.

But pick a day that didn't have much promise to start with.

 

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