Moral Rating: | not reviewed |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Adults |
Genre: | Drama |
Length: | 1 hr. 50 min. |
Year of Release: | 2002 |
USA Release: |
Featuring | James Van Der Beek, Shannyn Sossamon, Jessica Biel, Ian Somerhalder, Kate Bosworth |
Director |
Roger Avary |
Producer | Greg Shapiro |
Distributor |
Lionsgate (Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.) |
At the risk of sounding cliche, I think this movie might serve as a wake-up call to some in the pre-Believing world that sex, drugs, alcohol, and money offer no real fulfillment/contentment/meaning to life whatsoever; those things certainly aren’t glamorized. AND, without a lifestyle that actively pursues Truth—OUR lifestyles will eventually lead to OUR own demise.
There’s a scene in the movie where a character commits suicide. At first I thought this graphic scene messed with the pacing of the movie, but then I thought, “This is really what the movie’s all about.” Each character in the movie is living a life of perpetually eventual suicide. Each character self-loathes and because of this, lives a reckless, nihilistic, anything-goes-because-I’m-already-doomed, fatalistic lifestyle. The scene of suicide juxtaposed in the middle of the film serves as a metaphor for the entire movie.
Suicide (aka: self-destruction) takes many forms. If only they experienced Jesus, eh? ROA is not a movie about plot (the book isn’t about plot, either; in fact, there are no chapters)--but about characters we are never meant to connect with because their outlook on life is so extreme—so sterile—so base.
The movie doesn’t flow from A to Z as most formulaic movies do (intro-conclusion). No, this movie flows more like J to L; a snapshot in the middle of a greater timeline of these characters’ lives. And if you didn’t like any of the characters—good! The filmmakers succeeded! The film was intended to keep you at a distance in order for you to evaluate the foolishness of each characters’ choices. Going to see ROA is like going to a freak show at the circus. No one is mean
t to identify with the characters, we’re just supposed to look wide-eyed and thank God we’re not like them (no offense to the carnies!), and as a Christian viewer, feel compelled to free them from their shackles with the saving “unlock-all” skeleton key of Christ’s grace.
One of my roommates loved ROA, one of them hated it—so the opinions are all over the board on this one. After seeing it, I thought to myself, “This could be my life without Christ… Scary.” I’m thankful Christ is in my life, and after seeing ROA, am much more compelled to seek out pre-Believers and shower them with messages of hope and hugs of love.
My Ratings: [Extremely Offensive / 3]