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Director
Lasse Hallstrom
Writer John Irving
Stars Tobey Maguire, Charlize Theron, Michael
Caine, Delroy Lindo, Paul Rudd
Certificate 12
Running time 131 mins
Made US, 1999
THIS movie
has it all. Strong actors, beautiful scenery, World War II era costumes,
powerful themes of life and death, and a young man's quest to be the
hero of his own life. Such potential makes it all the more disappointing
when the film falls flat.
While we may smile at playful lovers or sympathise with Homer's ageing
mentor Dr. Wilbur Larch (Michael Caine), their stories don't sear
us. Like hero Homer Wells (Tobey Maguire, Pleasantville), we yearn
for a trip around the world and merely cross the state of Maine.
John Irving's adaptation of his own novel is a tale of simple pleasures:
a hard day's work, helping a stranger, comforting a child. Like most
Irving stories, it delves into unsavoury subjects: abortion, incest,
infidelity, drug abuse. Remarkably, the characters are mostly likable,
straightforward people who struggle through life trying not to make
too many mistakes.
In the orphanage where Homer grew up, women came either to deliver
an unwanted baby or abort an unwanted fetus. Homer rebels against
performing abortions because he identifies with the foetus. Dr. Larch
argues that they're helping the women avoid a more gruesome fate.
Homer's struggle with and eventual resolution of this debate becomes
a metaphor for the broader quest to set his own path in life, even
as Dr. Larch tries to chart it for him.
Homer and Dr. Larch take turns parenting the charming urchins, who
strive to look cute for each new couple who comes to adopt a child,
in the film's most touching scenes. Yet Irving reveals the dark side:
these children are obsessed with relationships, parents, and are sometimes
violent or emotional.
Director Lasse Hallstrom (My Life as a Dog) sets a gentle pace and
tone that seems in keeping with the innocence of the time period.
Misty shots of the Maine countryside make even apple picking look
good. Maguire and Theron lead an excellent cast, conveying much in
a simple look.
Before Homer hitches a ride from the orphanage in the convertible
of the glamorous Candy Kendall (Charlize Theron) and Wally Worthington
(Paul Rudd, Clueless), he's never seen a lobster, the ocean or any
movie other than King Kong. While he doesn't go far, he finds the
answers he's been looking for.
He gets a job in a cider house and eventually learns to ignore the
list of rules tacked to the wall. You make your own rules. This beautifully
made film is a pleasure to watch and feeds the intellect, though it's
not especially moving.
Katherine M. Reynolds
The Wolf like the Cider House Rules more
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