Affliction

Reviewed by: T.Tallis

February 22, 1999

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Odd that Atom Egoyan and Paul Schrader, two distinctive and fairly marginalized directors, would be attracted to the material of Russell Banks, popular rancoteur of rural despair and a writer whose heartstring tugs aren't known for their gentleness, for their latest films ("Sweet Hereafter" and "Affliction", respectively). What's not surprising is that both have managed to improve upon their source novels, to varying degrees of success. "Sweet Hereafter" was certainly a highly admirable film, but it's straightforward narrative made it Egoyan's most strangely unsatisfying film to date. Meanwhile, "Affliction" is Schrader's most assured and confident work in some time, and is his most expertly streamlined and quietly powerful work as a director so far. Wade Whitehouse is the appointed police chief of a small New Hampshire town, the kind of place where the appearance of a computer at city hall or a neon sign in a local diner can elicit both wonder and anger, who carries some rather glaring personal and domestic baggage of his own. When a union leader is killed in a hunting accident on a real-estate developer's property, Wade suspects foul play and embarks on a misguided investigation that threatens not only the fabric of the town, but culminates in Wade's excruciating collapse. But this is only a murder mystery in the most superficial sense (the 'case' is never even definitively 'solved'). The picture hones in on Wade's psychology and failures with a clinical scrutiny (Nick Nolte's thorough examination of the character is similarly determined and approaches, quite frankly, the heroic), but it's essentially the story of Rolfe, Wade's brother (played by Willem Dafoe in his standard 'resigned martyr' mode), who narrates the film and presents Wade's situation as a method for confronting his own demons. Rolfe has dissasociated himself from his family attempting to escape the physical and mental abuse delivered by their father (James Coburn, who's always struck me as more than a little creepy and doesn't, um, disappoint here). But, as Rolfe points out in his final monologue, the human products of violence are all too prevalent...Rolfe can manage, because for him home is everywhere. Wade, however, remains trapped, and when his mother dies and his father comes to live with him, his defenses (inflated self-importance, denial, alcohol, passive agressivenes) are no match for the decades of abuse-related trauma, and his desperate attempts at redemption reach tragic proportions. Tough stuff that covers a lot of emotional ground, and if it weren't for Nolte and Coburn's Oscar nods, it's not a picture that would find much of an audience (in fact, it was completed in 1997 and has been sitting on distributors' shelves since then). Which is really too bad; it's one of the most sober-minded, elegant and quietly powerful American pictures to come down the pike in some time, at times achieving a hushed reverence that plays like Tarkovsky with a New England twang (indeed, the film's central image is cribbed directly from Tarkovsky's "Sacrifice"). Where "Sweet Hereafter"'s elegiac tone was expressed through blank, wide-screen expanses, Schrader's claustrophobic box-shaped compositions are in a a constant state of contraction, and the actors' choreography deftly expresses their respective psychological states and relations to each other (watching Nolte, Coburn and Sissy Spacek - who gives her role as Wade's hesitant girlfriend more than it asks for - circumnavigate a cramped kitchen has more tension and dread than a thousand action pictures). It's not without a few false notes...there's some pretty hamfisted symbolism (Nolte's existential toothache and his Christ-on-the-Cross pose while performing crossing guard duty stand out), the mystery elements are only marginally interesting, and some of Dafoe's voice-overs lean towards the unnecessarily preachy (Dafoe himself at times seems reluctantly inserted, if not from another planet or picture, at least from another actors' workshop), and I'm not sure whether Schrader or Banks are to blame. Still, though, it would have been all too easy for Schrader to make an easy, simple-minded "Afterschool Special" polemic on the evils of domestic violence (what's onscreen here is actually quite minimal, but filmed as it is from a child's-eye view on grainy 8mm stock like some nightmare home-movie, is legitimately terrifying), or to present Wade's undoing with less contemplation and more viscera. As it is, it's a far more challenging, intelligent and haunting piece of work than that, and it quietly, inexorably earns its respect. Highly recommended.

 

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