Here's a review of "Bonneville," opening today, which is posted at 
ChristianityTodayMovies.com. 
 
*************
 
Bonneville          
A widow takes the ashes of her husband, and her two best friends, on a road 
trip across the American west in a1966 Bonneville convertible.  
Stars:  1 
Rated:  PG 
Genre: Comedy - Drama 
Date Released, Studio: February 29, 2008 by SenArt 
Runtime: 1 hour 93 min 
Cast: Jessica Lange (Arvilla), Kathy Bates (Margene), Joan Allen (Carol), Tom 
Skerritt (Emmett), Christine Baranaski (Francine) 
+++  
Oh boy, a movie about a 1966 Bonneville convertible! That's the car my 
sisters and I learned to drive on. Ours was silver with a black interior, 
purchased 
brand-new off the showroom floor with every possible extra. We called it the 
Batmobile. It's in retirement at Louisa's place now, but I like to think of it 
as resting up.  
I went to see the cinematic "Bonneville" filled with hopeful nostalgia, but, 
I regret to say, it's a really crummy movie. Though the car appears in the 
film, it's mere eye candy for a story about three middle-aged women ("middle," 
that is, if you know lots of 120-year-olds). They're using the spiffy vehicle 
to 
make a road trip from Pocatello, Idaho to Santa Barbara, California. Though 
road-trip movies have been overdone, it could still have been enjoyable, 
especially as a comedy retaining down-to-earth, wisecracking Kathy Bates. But 
"Bonneville" is also burdened with a *serious* plot element, one that feels 
contrived and manipulative. 
It's that Arvilla has just lost her husband, Joe. After his retirement, Joe 
became an adventurous traveler, and began taking Arvilla around the world. 
Death came while they were on a trip to Borneo. As the story opens we see 
Arvilla 
coming home in a taxi, clutching a container of Joe's ashes. She had made him 
a promise to scatter them, the where and how left unspecified.  
But Joe has a daughter from his first marriage, Francine, who feels strongly 
that he should be buried next to her mother, in the family plot in California. 
She offers Arvilla a deal: turn over the ashes by the time of the memorial 
service next week, and I won't sell this house. (The house was left to Francine 
in a pre-Arvilla will, and a theoretical later will amending that can't be 
found.)  
Since the unseen Joe looms large throughout the film, what kind of guy was 
he? Francine tells Arvilla that perhaps Joe never made a new will, since there 
were many things he said he'd do but never got around to, like moving to where 
he could be part of his grandchildren's lives. Later we learn that Joe had 
programmed Arvilla's phone so that a call from Francine would trigger the sound 
of a screaming raptor. Pretty hostile behavior, and there's no obvious reason 
why Francine deserves it. Apparently she is Joe's only child. 
There's also something creepy in the fact that Arvilla has placed his ashes 
in a pottery jar Joe purchased on one of his travels, one that had originally 
held the hearts of human sacrifices. Later, Margene recalls the time Joe gave 
her a gift of a shrunken head. My guess is that a shrunken head makes a 
hilarious gift only if it's not Caucasian. If it were, it would be too obvious 
that 
you are holding the decapitated head of a young woman, say, or a child, or even 
an old man like Joe.  
The film gives away this alternate view completely against its will. We are 
herded toward thinking that Francine must be in the wrong, because she's 
uptight and wealthy. (How wealthy? One day we see her and her husband playing 
tennis 
next to the porch of their home; the next day, the view from the porch shows 
a swimming pool. Wow.) Her father is presented as her opposite, an adventurous 
free spirit who won't be chained to the expectations of narrow, proper 
people. 
Does that sound familiar? It's the same narrative Baby Boomers internalized 
decades ago, when "narrow, proper people" meant their parents. Now that those 
foils are fast disappearing, Boomers are swinging around to paste the label on 
their children. (Another Jessica Lange film, "Big Fish," preaches the same 
sermon.) Once a rebel, always a rebel, even if you have to invent someone to 
rebel against.  
>From the moment that Arvilla and her friends Margene and Carol hit the road, 
I knew exactly what was going to happen [SPOILER ALERT]: Arvilla would go 
ahead and scatter Joe's ashes, and fool Francine by handing her a jar 
containing 
ashes of some other kind. I didn't foresee exactly what those ashes would be, 
and it is a moment of piercing cruelty-if you see Francine as a real, grieving 
person, that is. But "Bonneville" is determined you'll see things only from 
its jerryrigged perspective.  
"Bonneville" does have its bright points: Kathy Bates is operating in a 
different, more authentic universe than the rest of the cast, and provides some 
genuine laughs. The color scheme of the movie is consistently attractive, too, 
if 
unrealistic (when the women are in an autumn environment, they wear 
harmonizing outfits of orange, brown, and khaki green; when they're at the 
beach, 
they're all in white, beige, and light blue. And I sure don't think the '66 
Bonneville came in burnt orange.) Joe's ashes have gotten the Hollywood 
treatment, 
too. My husband, a pastor, has had occasion to deal with cremated remains 
("cremains," in the funeral industry's cute little euphemism). What Arvilla 
keeps 
tenderly releasing to the wind is ashy and fine as dust; what you'd be more 
likely to see, on looking into the shoe-box-sized container, would be dried, 
pulverized bone, with some chips disconcertingly larger than others.  
The visual center of the drama is Jessica Lange's face, and unfortunately 
she's had that thing done where the zone from eyebrows to cheekbones has been 
ironed out sideways with extra starch. You'd think any actor would especially 
prize and protect control of the myriad subtle muscles around the eyes, but 
this 
surgery pins everything back so tightly that the eyes look taut and masked. 
The rest of Lange's still-lovely face is soft and believable, and it's a shame 
she didn't leave well enough alone. She's an actress of substance, with two 
Oscars on her mantelpiece, and could have easily sold us on the beauty of a 
natural older face. This surgery doesn't even deliver what it promises: it 
doesn't 
make anybody look young, just weird. 
"Bonneville" seems carefully constructed to get older women to come out to 
the movie theater, and self-consciously adorable "Red Hat" ladies 
http://www.redhatsociety.com/  will eat it up. They may be able to bring some 
men with them, 
with the car providing catnip for the guys the way Brad Pitt did for female 
viewers in "Troy." For anybody else, the film is a bust. The '66 Bonneville was 
a great car, but these talented ladies deserved a better vehicle.  
Talk About It:  
1. For every movie about breaking free from authority and being true to 
yourself, there's a movie about loyalty to friends and family no matter what. 
Why 
are we so ambivalent about commitment? How can we know God's calling in these 
situations?  
2. Scripture teaches that we must not favor either the rich or the poor 
(Leviticus 19:15, "You shall not be partial to the poor or defer to the 
great"). We 
know well that we should be kind and compassionate toward the poor. But how 
should we treat the rich?  
3. Early Christians associated the burning of a body with desecration; 
burning was for garbage. Christ's incarnation and bodily Resurrection taught, 
on the 
contrary, that the body was worthy of honor (in sharp contrast to Gnostics, 
who regarded the material world with contempt). Should Christians prefer to 
bury a body intact? Or is cremation as valid an option?  


********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com



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