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Touched Angels
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In his raucous,
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vaudevillian allegory
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Dogma
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, Kevin Smith concocts a scenario in
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which the will of God comes apocalyptically into conflict with Catholic
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doctrine. To wholly relate how that happens--the plot involves a missionary New
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Jersey cardinal (George Carlin), the devil, and two fallen, somewhat insane
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angels (Matt Damon and Ben Affleck)--would not only ruin the surprise, it would
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ruin this review, since there are nearly as many convolutions in the narrative
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as there are in Scripture. I first wrote about Dogma (and Smith's edgy
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press conference) when the movie had its American premiere in October at the
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New York Film Festival amid demonstrations by the Catholic League and other
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groups. Click to read that account. Then I'll tell you a few things that I wish
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I'd said, regret saying, and might have said better.
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Some additional hosannas
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first. The angels' wings are cool. They look like genuine flesh, blood, and
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cartilage, especially when they're clipped, and they literally add texture to
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effects that might have seemed, well, featherweight. Dogma is the first
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time that Smith--whose clunky direction in Chasing Amy (1997) did his
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skillful script no favors--seems interested in moving the camera, composing the
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frame, editing, etc. The mixture of slacker small-talk, goofy slapstick, and
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Grand Guignol horror works better than anyone could have imagined. What holds
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it all together is the writer-director's fervid conviction. A hint of cynicism
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would have turned Dogma into camp, but the movie--in spite of its rubber
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poop monsters and splattery gore and smutty jokes--has the resonance of
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belief.
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On reflection, however, I think that Smith was being a tad
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disingenuous when he said at his press conference that he wasn't expecting an
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angry reaction. Yes, he's a good Catholic boy, but he's also schooled in the
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works of that very bad Catholic boy, John Waters. Yes, he wanted to affirm his
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reverence for God and Jesus, but he also wanted to give a hot-foot to the
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Catholic Church. Like a lot of good comics, he wanted to be "outrageous"--but
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he didn't necessarily want to outrage . He was truly shocked when
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homicidally anti-Semitic letters poured into the offices of Harvey and Bob
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Weinstein of Miramax. (Its parent company, Disney, ultimately decided not to
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distribute the film.) And he's legitimately terrified of death threats--who
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wouldn't be? He wanted people to talk--and laugh and argue--about his movie,
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but he had no intention of courting martyrdom.
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Let's go further and admit that Smith is not merely
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"kicking the tires of his faith"--he's slashing them. He's saying that
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organized religion needs a better tread. He's blaming the indifferent status of
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a lot of Catholics on the church itself. (His churchgoing heroine, Bethany,
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played by Linda Fiorentino, has become so desensitized to Vatican teachings
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that she works in an abortion clinic.) Smith has written a character--the
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13 th apostle, played by Chris Rock--whose view of organized religion
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is akin to Gov. Jesse Ventura's: He believes it has lost touch with the
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fundamental religious impulse. In the film, there is no counterweight to Rock's
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apostle--no substantial or sane character who speaks on the rightness of
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Catholic dogma. There isn't even a Dostoevskian Grand Inquisitor to tell us why
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humans need so many rules and regulations to keep from following their animal
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natures into despair and anarchy. The tone of Dogma might be searching,
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but Smith already has his answers. Unlike Martin Scorsese, whose solemn 1988
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adaptation of Nikos Kazantzakis' The Last Temptation of
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Christ
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set off a similar firestorm, Smith has earned the wrath. He should just say: "I
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meant to piss you off, just don't start any pogroms or shoot me."
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There's another aspect of
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Dogma that rattles peoples' cages. Most millennial apocalypse fantasies
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have been promulgated by the religious right, which wants to frighten people
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into repenting their liberal attitudes toward the Scripture. Outside of weird
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fringe pictures such as Larry Cohen's God Told Me To (1977),
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Dogma is the first truly countercultural apocalypse fantasy. Smith is
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fighting the end-of-the-world mavens on their own turf, appropriating their
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rhetoric and their symbols for his own, decidedly less Moral Majoritarian ends.
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You can imagine the doomsayers storming out of theaters and fuming, "Whose
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Armageddon is it, anyway?"
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The camera is at eye level for
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Rosetta
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. In
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the tumultuous opening, it hurtles down a staircase behind the teen-age title
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character (Emilie Dequenne) as she tries to elude the factory boss who has just
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fired her. It swerves left then right as she pulls on locked doors in a vain
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attempt to evade the plant's security. It's sickeningly in the thick of things
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as she claws at her pursuers and shrieks that it's unfair, she's a good worker,
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she doesn't deserve to be let go. Throughout this terse, entertaining parable
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(it won the grand prize at this year's Cannes Film Festival), the Belgian-born
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writer-directors Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne ( La Promesse , 1996)
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immerse you in the sensations of Rosetta's life: her daily, roundabout slog
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through the woods to reach the trailer park where she lives with her alcoholic
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mother (she's too ashamed to go through the front entrance); her frustrating
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treks to find employment, however menial; and, most of all, her countless rages
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at a society that refuses to grant her a "normal" (her word) existence.
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By confining the movie's
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perspective to Rosetta and her rituals, the Dardennes suggest the ways in which
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people lose the big picture and so have no insight into their own corruption.
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All they know is what they need--and what will happen if someone else beats
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them out. In Dequenne, the filmmakers have found a somewhat lumpen girl
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with just a trace of prettiness, especially when she opens her eyes and lets
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the world see in. She mostly doesn't, though, which is the point. She tromps
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around dull-eyed in a gray skirt and thick, mustard-colored stockings--a sullen
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bottom-feeder. When a generous friend, Riquet (Fabrizio Rongione)--the only one
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she has ever had, the film implies--falls into quicksand and screams for help,
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you can see Rosetta's thought processes: If he dies, his job will open up,
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she'll get it, and she'll be "normal."
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As in the La Promesse , the point is to show how
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capitalism is fundamentally at odds with human decency. People are good, but
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they're driven to victimize others by the fear that what they have will be
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taken away. At best, they turn into machines; at worst (most of the bosses),
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they become casual exploiters. You can't land a job without being raked by the
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angry gaze of the person you've unfairly replaced, and once you have it there
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are no guarantees that tomorrow you won't be raking someone else with your own
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angry gaze. Change the way things work and you will change mankind, is the
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implicit message--although it's crucial to add that there are no
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explicit messages, no Brechtian/Marxist exhortations. Both
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Rosetta and La Promesse end at the point when their protagonist's
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consciousness begins. The next step is anyone's guess.
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I fear I've made
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Rosetta sound programmatic. Well, it is, but the thing you come away
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with isn't the program but the rhythm and texture of a young, working-class
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woman's life. The Dardennes are peerless at staging and shooting rituals, such
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as Rosetta's day selling waffles and beer from a truck: taking an order,
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plucking a waffle from the iron, grabbing a beer from the shelf, counting
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money, making change, saying thank you, taking another order … It's easy to
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dismiss films that make grandiose statements about how people ought to live but
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never convincingly portray how they do. The utterly believable capitalist
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ecosystems of the Dardennes are harder to shake off.
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Most of the good stuff in William Trevor's novel
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Felicia's Journey
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takes place behind the eyes of its central
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characters: a young Irish girl, Felicia, who crosses the sea to England in a
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hopeful quest to find the father of her unborn child; and the fat, middle-aged
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catering manager, Hiditch, who takes a paternal interest in the lass when it
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becomes clear that her young man has caddishly given her the slip. The girl is
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a naive, but her mixture of optimism and spooky prescience gives her
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perceptions weight, and Hiditch has a subterranean existence that's constantly
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at odds with his pleasantries: He might well be a psychopath who has preyed
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on--and dispatched--other young women. Atom Egoyan, the Canadian director
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( Exotica , 1994; The Sweet Hereafter , 1997) who adapted and
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directed the book, does tender, morbidly evocative work. As Felicia, the
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coltish Elaine Cassidy manages to look both luminous and unformed, and Bob
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Hoskins gives Hiditch's bland homilies so much subtext he made me think of the
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Paris Opera House in the Phantom of the Opera : basement under basement
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under basement down to the dungeons. Handing Felicia a cup of tea, he says,
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"The goodness is in the warmth, they say," and I half expected maggots to swarm
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out of his mouth.
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The movie doesn't come to much, though. Egoyan's
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best films have tricky textures: They double and triple back on themselves in
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ways that play against the characters' bland visages and the often sterile
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settings. Here, apart from a few choice flashbacks, the action is crawlingly
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linear--and opaque. Egoyan has invented a delicious character--Hiditch's
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celebrity French chef mom--for his wife, the marvelous Arsinée Khanjian, and
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she gives the movie a jolt of energy whenever she pops up on TV screens or in
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Hiditch's memory. But the rest is just a cat-and-mouse game for a rather
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slow-witted cat and an even slower-witted mouse. On Quaaludes. Under water
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