An Athiest Movie?
Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2011 10:21 pm
The Ledge held me on the edge of my seat from start to finish, which is a very good thing these days, when I am tempted to give up on many pictures after only five minutes. An imperfect film, it perhaps deals with too many issues to be completely successful, but the ones it succeeds with are worth the investment.
The opening frames of the movie are immediately visually stunning. Shot so cleanly and sharply as to almost look like a graphic novel, the first shots use as backdrop the flickering towers of an oil refinery t
hat is never visited and only mentioned briefly, but it sets the mood and draws us in with its unconscious imagery.
We are soon brought to a glaring reality as Hollis (Terrance Howard -- one of the film's producers) is getting the bad news that he is sterile. It is especially bad considering that his loving wife has supposedly borne his two children.
Attempting to leave work early (he is a detective) after his shocking doctor's visit, a distracted Hollis is called in on a would-be jumper and what follows is his attempt to talk him down while receiving imploring calls from his wife. The jumper is not in any rush and is eager to share what has led him to this point in his life, although he appears uncompromisingly set on his planned deed.
Most of the picture goes to flashback as Gavin (Charlie Hunnam) accounts his forbidden romance with the wife of a religious zealot. In his attempt to free her from her husband's rigid "Born Again" impositions, he opens up a can of worms that moves the action very quickly and heatedly to the point of no return.
This is no ordinary religious couple but one which has actually been saved by the promises of heaven in return for a clean lifestyle, as we learn that Shauna (an irresistibly subtle, yet alluring Liv Tyler ) is not the prim, serious girl that the opening scenes suggest. She confesses to her ardent seducer that she was abandoned by her father -- eventually becoming a heavy drug user and prostitute. Her husband Joe (Patrick Wilson) literally saved her as she lay bleeding in the church that she was beaten in by a kinky john.
With the plot set in motion the film sets out to thrill us and take on the ever conflicting subject of faith vs. atheism. Not just religious faith, but faith in people, marriage, and an examination of life's uncontrollable tragedies.
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