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The following are movie reviews of 'Godsend' and 'Bobby Jones:
Stroke of Genius.'
'Godsend'
(Lions Gate)
When a tragedy takes their young son's life, a couple strikes
a Faustian bargain to get him back, with unforeseen consequences,
in the cautionary thriller "Godsend."
Fueled by the debate surrounding advances in reproductive
technologies, the film touches on vitally important issues
concerning bioethics and the moral implications of artificially
creating human life.
Greg Kinnear and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos star as Paul and
Jessie Duncan, a husband and wife whose domestic bliss is
shattered when their 8-year-old son, Adam (Cameron Bright),
is killed in a traffic accident. An uncharacteristically hammy
Robert De Niro plays Richard Wells, a brilliant but enigmatic
geneticist who approaches the Duncans with the incredible
offer to clone Adam and give them back their happy life.
Paul, a high school biology teacher, balks at the preposterous
proposal, voicing ethical and legal concerns. However, Jessie,
a photographer, is willing to pursue any means to get her
son back --- even if means the new child would just be an
identical "copy." After much soul-searching, Paul's resistance
gives way to acquiescence.
The
couple resettles in the small town where Wells' Godsend Fertility
Clinic is situated. To assure that the illegal procedure is
kept absolutely secret, Wells demands that they sever all
ties with their former life. Jessie is fertilized with stem
cells carrying Adam's DNA, and soon after gives birth to "Adam"
--- for a second time.
Adam's
life proceeds with "Groundhog Day"-like predictability, but
as he reaches his eighth birthday --- the age his duplicate
died --- things begin to take an ominous turn. He starts to
have vivid nightmares, which Wells --- who has remained close
to the family as an "uncle" --- dismisses as the common childhood
sleep disorder known as "night terrors."
But as the visions become more intense, Adam's lovable personality
darkens, revealing a sinister streak. The Duncans decide to
seek outside medical advice --- a move strongly discouraged
by Wells.
Adam's cryptic references to "another boy" spark fears that
he is somehow "remembering" things from the first Adam's life,
forcing Paul and Jessie to come to terms with their decision
and setting in motion a series of chilling revelations about
Wells' shadowy past.
Kinnear and Romijn-Stamos are both solid and convincingly
convey the devastation of losing a child. Their sympathetic
portrayal of the grief-stricken couple allows viewers to empathize
with their pain-prompted decision. However, Catholics should
be careful not to interpret such emotional commiseration as
justification for condoning their course of action. And while
not likely to blur the moral outlook of adults concerning
the issue of cloning, the film employs a stacked-deck tactic
by couching the central question in such a way that if you
find fault in the Duncans' decision to undergo the procedure
you run the risk of coming across as heartless.
Early on, in an unrelated discussion, Jessie tells her husband,
"Sometimes ethics have to take a back seat" --- which is exactly
what happens. Though Paul initially refers to the cloning
process as only "potentially immoral," the overall message
of the film seems to fall on the side of condemnation ---
or at least caution --- when attempting to play God.
Unfortunately, after an intelligent setup, the story's philosophical
pretensions quickly give way to spooky atmospherics and standard
ghost-story devices which detract from the central moral dilemma
posed. The rickety script's emotionally unsatisfying ending
leaves too much unresolved.
The final confrontation between Paul and Wells, though heavy-handed
in its execution, brings to the fore the important distinction
between "can do" and "should do." Wells roars, "If I'm not
supposed to do this, then how come I can?" The church teaches
that medical science does not have the moral right to do something
simply because that something is now doable --- especially
when that something denies the sacred dignity of the human
person, and reduces humans to mere objects which can be manipulated.
As G.K. Chesterton once said, "We are learning a great many
clever things. The next great task will be to learn not to
do them."
Due to a sexual encounter, a problematic theme of cloning,
recurring profanity, sporadic crude language and some scary
sequences, the USCCB Office for Film & Broadcasting classification
is A-III --- adults. The Motion Picture Association of America
rating is PG-13 --- parents are strongly cautioned. Some material
may be inappropriate for children under 13.
'Bobby
Jones: Stroke of Genius' (Film Foundry)
Handsomely crafted biopic set in the 1920s about the life
of legendary golfer Bobby Jones (Jim Caviezel), who, though
getting off to a sickly start, defied the odds, overcoming
physical hardships and personal demons, to rise to the pinnacle
of the sports world. Though the unfocused narrative spends
too much time in tedious tournament sequences, the well-acted
film, directed by Rowdy Herrington, is an inspirational celebration
of the ability of the human spirit to triumph over adversity
and succeed without abandoning personal principles. The USCCB
is A-II, and the MPAA is PG.
'Laws
of Attraction' (New Line)
Underwhelming romantic comedy in which two rival divorce lawyers
(Pierce Brosnan and Julianne Moore) wake up married after
a drunken evening and must continue as opposing attorneys
on a bitter court case while carrying on a spousal charade.
Director Peter Howitt's attractive cast and sumptuous production
design can only compensate so much for the paucity of witty
dialogue and obvious plot contrivances. Implied sexual encounters
following inebriation, impersonation of a cleric, a few crude
expressions and an instance of profanity. The USCCB is A-III,
and the MPAA is PG-13.
David DiCerto is on the staff of the Office for Film &
Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
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