A Map of the World Movie Review
A Map of the World Review

"A Map of the World" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Scott ElliottProducer : Kathleen Kennedy,Frank Marshall
Screenwiter : Peter Hedges,Polly Platt
Starring : Sigourney Weaver,Julianne Moore,David Strathairn,Ron Lea,Arliss Howard,Chloë Sevigny
What American Beauty did for the suburbs, A Map of the World aims to do for the
farm life.
I said "aims," of course. A Map of the World is deeply flawed yet still worth
a look, especially if you're into grandiose, weepy, self-important dramas. And
hey, who isn't?
Obviously based on an Oprah-class novel, A Map of the World is the story of
Alice Goodwin (Weaver), a put-upon school nurse who lives on a Wisconsin farm
as part of an "experiment" by her rather oblivious husband Howard
(Straitharn). Right with the voice over at the film's beginning, it's clear
that Alice is going to have some Bad Times ahead, and within 20 minutes, said
Times are upon us.
Alice is so frazzled she can't even keep an eye on the neighbors' precious
daughter, who wanders off about 200 yards to the pond and promptly drowns.
Hair tearing and chest beating ensues, and Alice's mindset only gets worse.
Then the kicker: A real bitch of a woman (Sevigny) accuses Alice of abusing her
son, a student at the school where Alice works. Go to jail, Alice. Courtroom
drama follows.
As a story, A Map of the World is all over the map (no pun intended) -- from
marital troubles between Alice and Howard to in-law problems (Fletcher playing
Howard's doting mother) to legal mumbo-jumbo to a bizarre and out of place
stretch with Alice doing time in jail during her trial. The whole notion of
jail as a metaphor for Alice's mental healing (you know, a personal prison for
dealing with her anguish over the death of the neighbor child?) is unbelievably
over-the-top and just comes off as phony.
In fact, very little of this holds together as a narrative, and at 127 minutes,
so much of this is extraneous padding that the film positively crawls. Even
worse is Weaver's character (not necessarily Weaver herself, mind you). Alice
is so selfish, melodramatic, and just plain dumb that the character hurts the
film. Contrary to speculation, there will be no Oscar nod for Weaver this year.
Still, there's something to like. Most notable is Julianne Moore as the
too-perfect neighbor whose daughter dies. Her character grows more than the
rest of the cast combined, and her heartfelt performance makes up for a lot of
the rest of this World. Still, the film can't ride on her surprisingly small
role alone, so unless this all sounds like your idea of a great way to spend an
evening, you'll probably want to pass.
World weary.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





