3 Needles Movie Review
3 Needles Review

"3 Needles" Overview

Rating: NR
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Thom FitzgeraldProducer : Thom Fitzgerald,Bryan Hofbauer
Screenwiter : Thom Fitzgerald
Starring : Lucy Liu,Stockard Channing,Olympia Dukakis,Chloe Sevigny,Sandra Oh,Shawn Ashmore,Tanabadee Chokpikultong,Ian Roberts
It's exceedingly strange that 3 Needles, a lavish and dramatic film shot on
three continents and starring a huge cast of A-listers has garnered almost no
attention since it was first shown in 2005 and later had short releases in
major cities in conjunction with World AIDS Day in 2006. Lucy Liu fans, why
haven't you spoken up?
A collection of three short films connected only by their central theme that a
lack of AIDS awareness around the world can lead to nothing but the most abject
kinds of tragedy. Writer/director Thom Fitzgerald sets his short stories in
China, Montreal, and South Africa, each outlining its own depressing reality.
In China, the hugely pregnant Jin Ping (Liu) traffics in blood. Driving from
village to village, she pays villagers about $5 to collect their pints,
disguises it with a label that says "spicy red sauce," and hopes she'll be able
to get her crates past soldiers' road blocks. Unsanitary collection and
distribution of the blood leads to an AIDS epidemic, completely obliterating
the village of Tong Sam (Tanabadee Chokpikultong), who even sold his daughter's
blood when his was deemed unacceptable due to illness.
In Montreal, 3 Needles adds a touch of very dark comedy. Young local porn star
Denys (Shawn Ashmore) is infected and can't pass the porn industry's required
monthly HIV tests, so he circumvents them by using blood he steals from his
nearly comatose father. His mother Olivia (a great Stockard Channing), strapped
for cash, learns of Shawn's deceit and tries to set up an elaborate insurance
scam to profit off his eventual inevitable death. She even tries to infect
herself at one point, depending on a most unsavory character to pass her the
bug in a highly undignified way. You'll love her French-Canadian accent.
The film's most gripping story takes place on a gorgeous stretch of the South
African coast, where three missionary nuns arrive to tend to AIDS victims and
soon find themselves caught up in a real horror show. Sister Hilde (Olympia
Dukakis) is the wise old bird who sees nothing but her mission to bring souls
to Jesus. Novice sister Clara (Chloe Sevigny) is more grounded in daily
reality, desperately trying to improve conditions for those who are suffering,
even taking in a family of five children when they are orphaned by AIDS. Sister
Mary John (Sandra Oh) helps her out. When Sister Clara discovers that the
locals believe having sex with a virgin can cure AIDS, it explains the
nightmarish baby rapes she's been hearing about. She tries to get the local
white overlord Hallyday (Ian Roberts) to help, but he can only come up with a
repulsive quid pro quo. Will Clara sell her own soul to help others' souls?
All of this is extremely depressing, but it's also fascinating, scenic, and
very well crafted. Production notes reveal that an alternate cut interlaces the
three stories, but for once, saner heads have prevailed, and we needn't suffer
through Babel or Crash-like confusion in the mainstream release. Instead we can
focus on the great performances and the heartbreaking dilemmas and wonder why
more people haven't heard about this unusual film.
Aka Three Needles.
Three wimples.
Reviewer: Don Willmott





