July 13, 2004

“The Door In The Floor” – A Movie review

A Wrenching Tragedy Shatters A Happy Marriage
By Fred H. Arm
HoleInFloor.jpg
This well-acted tragedy pulls us through an exploration of the complexities of love in both the darkest and brightest corridors. Adapted from John Irving’s best-selling novel, “A Widow For One Year”, the film carefully weaves its way through the painful and tragic aftermath of a deadly accident, alternating between comedy and disaster.

The setting is in the privileged beach community of East Hampton on Long Island, New York where our hero, a children’s book author, Ted Cole (Jeff Bridges) resides with his beautiful wife Marion (Kim Bassinger). Once upon a time, they had a happy marriage until the bliss was shattered by the accidental death of their two sons. The aftermath resulted in a general despondency and bizarre infidelities that did little to assuage the pain and dysfunction of their deteriorating relationship. The remnants of a once great love are hinted at in almost every scene, although alas are clouded over by their inability to regroup to face the future and put away the past.

Eddie O’Hare, (Jon Foster) the college junior Ted hired to work as his summer assistant and protégé, becomes the couple’s unwitting, yet willing pawn, who ultimately evolves into the catalyst in the transformation of their bitter lives. Ted’s recent children’s book, “The Door In The Floor” in due course becomes the surviving metaphor for transforming their lives.

The evolving story seems to beg for something really horrific to happen, yet offers a kind of relief when this fear is unrealized. One senses that if this couple had only handled their loss differently, a far better result would have followed. It is also a poignant tale of a young boy’s rite of passage becoming a man and another man sinking into an emotional immaturity and then hopefully climbing back out.

Directed and written by Tod Williams, this tale is quite apart from the usual Hollywood drivel that may leave you mired in an introspective quandary for quite some time.

Opens July 14th, 2004 in San Francisco

Posted by fredarm at July 13, 2004 02:48 PM
Comments
Post a comment









Remember personal info?