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VHS Movie Reviews of At Play in the Fields of the Lord (2pc) [VHS]Movie Review: WHERE IS THE DVD? Summary: 4 StarsThis great film has been extensively reviewed on this website and for good reason--perfect casting, terrific acting, gripping story, intelligent dialogue, superior production. What more can you ask for?
The DVD has been 'hinted at' for well over a year. WHERE IS IT? How can a film this great not have a DVD release, ESPECIALLY WHEN this website has been indicating for a VERY long time that it will be out on DVD?
Kathy Bates as the wife of a missionary who goes loco (that is, she does, not the missionary). Darryl Hannah as another wife of a missionary who's more than intrigued by the native Amazon culture--in particular when she's approached by Tom Berenger, former small craft pilot, who's undergone a startling transformation. Even Tom Waits in a small part is great. John Lithgow and Aidan Quinn as the two missionaries supply the right chemistry to exacerbate the tension that drives this story with a momentum that does not let up.
This is a near-perfect film. SO WHERE IS THE DVD?
Movie Review: Illusions of the white man Summary: 3 StarsAfter watching this movie it made me more aware that the so called civilization of 'primitive' cultures is generally more destructive than helpful.
It showed how we have to make everything our way - but it also shows that people who choose to live among different cultures in understanding get farther.
But to end all scenes is when Kathy Bates has a nervous break down and dances around naked, covered in mud and shaking palm branches - as serious as I take the movie this particular scene has me rolling in laughter!
Movie Review: Viewer Discretion Required!!! Summary: 5 Stars Do not watch this movie if you are looking for entertainment that a regular movie usually provides. Let me warn you- this movie has no romantic themes which make people want to slip into the characters and enter a dreamy world neither does it have any dramatic action sequence where the `bad guy' finally gets killed and you are left with the feeling that the world is once more `safe'. This is a movie about conflicts rising up from cultural differences and the consequences they might finally lead to. This is a movie that shows obvious sides of human life but it will make you really uncomfortable.
Leslie Huben (John Lithgow) a missionary head who believes he can share the greater glory of God by converting the Niaruna Indians into Christians. As a result of his religious hypocrisy, he is far away from winning the trust of the Indians. Instead he ends up losing the trust of his own wife. On the other hand Lewis Moon (Tom Berenger), a half-breed Indian, leaves all his western attachments and attempts to become one of the tribe members. For the Niaruna Indians the strange people that encroach upon their land become a threat to their own existence. Although Moon learns to speak and look like an Indian, he remains a `white man' in the eyes of the Indians because of his acquired western values. After all the efforts, Moon is still in search for his identity.
The chaos that is created by the cultural clashes is really disturbing. This movie certainly focuses on the problems from different viewpoints and the understanding about different cultures is much deepened. However, the answers just seem to raise more questions and the solution of the problem seems ever elusive. With the present global condition with many cultural dominances and religious wars, this movie raises quite relevant questions. Giving our thoughts to those questions may be quite challenging but it will certainly be very rewarding. I wish you greatest level of conscience for watching the movie.
Movie Review: Eye-opener Summary: 5 StarsThis movie, having not read the book, was great. It is filmed on site, in the Amazon, which makes everything seem much more realistic and really makes an impact. Also, the casting was very good I thought. John Lithgow played a great crooked missionary and definitely fit the part. This is one of those movies you are told in class that we have to watch and you dread it, until it actually starts. It is definitely a long movie, but I don't think I took my eyes off the television set until it was over, and then wanted to watch parts again. I especially liked how actual natives were used in the movie. It emphasized how real their culture was and the impact the Americans were making on it. The missionaries pretty much destroyed their life and culture by trying to convert them to Christianity. They had no right to change everything, they weren't hurting anyone, in fact, they had their way of life and just didn't want someone else changing it. You see the negative impact of the Americans when almost everyone in the tribe falls sick to influenza. They had never been exposed to an illness like that, and it kills tons of them. The missionaries came to "save" the Niaruna, but actually ended up killing many of them. This movie also shows how a "half-breed", Moon struggles with himself to find his place. He ends up in the village with the natives, trying to be one of them, but realizes he is still a white man. Altogether a great film, and I would recommend it to anyone that wants a real eye-opener to how different cultures are.
Movie Review: Kisu-mu! Kisu-mu! You are a white man! Summary: 4 StarsThere comes a time in every college student's life where we realize that the world is not complete without our lovely, educational movies. Okay, okay, I'll drop the sarcasm and get to the review. Firstly, I only gave this movie four stars because of the casting, and not the acting or the plot. I felt that John Lithgow was a poor choice for the missionary Leslie, mostly because it's hard to tell whether or not the guy is being serious. He has a lot of talent, but after watching him in Cliffhanger, and then Third Rock from the Sun, there was quite a bit of clashing. To his defense, once I watched the movie a little, his extreme bigotry and religious hypocrisy became quite evident, and quite serious.
The fact that this movie was made completely on location added a lot to the impact of the movie. At Play in the Fields of the Lord was not in the least way one of the fake, "gilded," Hollywood movies, and was instead very realistic and believable. The plight of the Quarriers was very believable, and at times, heart-wrenching.
The movie itself poses many questions that are applicable in everywhere, and not just in the jungle. For example, what is the benefit of culture to the individual? To a people? One only has to examine the character of Moon for the answer. An Indian half-breed, Moon is a drunkard and a renegade. He has loyalty to none, and no one has any to him (unless you count Wolf's "friendship"). After nearly killing himself with a native concoction, he finds a home among the Niaruna, and for the first time in his life, feels a part of something bigger. His actions, ironically, also lead to the death and scattering of the tribe.
At times the movie is very obvious, and at times crudely so. Since I have not the read the book, I cannot say how true the movie is to it, but I would have liked something a little more ...tasteful. I prefer movies that employ subtlety, though in the case of this movie, the LACK of subtlety was shocking for a reason. Beware.
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