Saturday, February 11, 2012

HIGHER GROUND


The most satisfying aspect of actor Vera Farmiga’s directorial debut movie is that although it is about the spiritual conflict of one woman as she drifts between skepticism and religious faith it never ever takes sides as she strives for the higher ground.

We first see Corrine as a child when she responds to her church’s pastor who is urging all the children to embrace Jesus.  She is hardly a devout worshiper and it is not until later when she is the young wife of a rock singer and they and their young baby are saved from near drowning, which she beliefs is a sign from God, that she joins a cultish evangelical church and gets enmeshed with their extreme convictions.

As time passes Corinne feels increasingly stifled by the patriarchal ways of her church, and as her marriage starts to fall apart and she ‘loses’ her only female friend when she suffers a stroke, she starts to question her faith itself.  It’s not as though all the men are bad, but being expected to simply acquiesce to their dominance without question and not being allowed to develop her own intellectual curiosity and grow, simply becomes unacceptable.  Leaving her marriage and her church becomes unavoidable but it is not a quick fix solution for her, and in fact the story intriguingly ends on a note of irresolution.

This movie entered my radar not because of my own religious convictions (!) but because of Ms. Farmiga, who for my money ‘stole’ 'Up In The Air' from it's star George Clooney with her knock-your-socks-off performance.  She not only directs Higher Ground but stars in it too,  and also has persuaded her non-actor sister to play Corrine as a young woman.  The movie is an inspired choice for her first time out directing, and she elicits great performances from her star studded cast that includes John Hawkes, Donna Murphy, Bill Irwin, Norbert Leo Butz, Dagmara Dominiczky and Broadway’s latest darling Nina Arianda.

As an atheist I really liked the middle ground that Ms. Farmiga took in this fascinating movie of hers as it seemed to really take a step back and see faith as a series of choices that should be made freely and without peer pressure of any sort.

Highly recommended. The movie that is.  'Christianity' is another matter entirely.

★★★★★