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Ballast Movie Review
Ballast Review

"Ballast" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Lance HammerProducer : Lance Hammer,Nina Parikh
Screenwiter : Lance Hammer
Starring : Michael J. Smith Sr.,JimMyron Ross,Tara Riggs
Set well below the poverty line in rural Mississippi, writer-director-editor
Lance Hammer's Ballast is the first film in some time that has attempted to
bring Bressonian singularity and emotional depth to the American independent
picture. A bona fide critic's darling at this year's Sundance Film Festival,
Hammer's metaphysical southern drama came away, rightly, with both the award
for best direction and best cinematography. That it lost the dramatic
competition to the mediocre micro-indie Frozen River comes as little surprise
considering the fest's history.
It begins with an attempted double suicide as Lawrence (Michael J. Smith Sr.)
walks into his bedroom to find his twin brother, Darius, dead from a
self-inflicted overdose and decides to follow suit with a gunshot to his chest.
An unexpected recovery doesn't brighten his disposition, nor does his
sister-in-law Marlee (Tara Riggs) and nephew James (JimMyron Ross). This
triptych of lost souls wander empty farms and side roads and settle in their
ramshackle homes, finding little reason past a dreary climate for Darius'
decision. Their only refuge comes in the form of restoring an abandoned gas
mart that once belonged to Lawrence and Darius.
Inflected with similar tone and imagery as the Dardenne brothers, Belgium's
high laureates of Bressonian mischief, Hammer uses non-professional actors and
coaxes out quiet, natural performances, especially from the hulking Smith who
borders on catatonic. He has some very engaging interplay with the equally-mum
Ross, whose character begins on a note of crime as he attempts to rip off a
local pack of hoodlums and then rob his uncle of his scant possessions. Marlee,
the lone feminine presence, causes commotion like she was paid up-front but
Riggs, a visceral presence, keeps her grounded in urgency rather than melodrama.
It's the absence of music and clamor that makes Ballast such a nuanced work.
The opening image is stupendous: James in his parka running towards a flock of
geese, scattering them into the ash-grey sky before settling on a static shot
of James. Increasingly mobile, Hammer's use of handheld cameras juxtaposes with
his dilatory cast, suggesting inner bedlam to match a stoic veneer. With the
exceptions of Marlee's outbursts, however, the film keeps things at a low hum,
nestling deep into its rainy, mud-strewn purgatory.
Hammer's film is not without its faults: certain scenes run aimlessly, and the
saving grace of the gas mart comes rather abruptly. Nevertheless, Ballast
overcomes, bathed in natural light framed eloquently by cinematographer Lol
Crowley in widescreen 35mm.
Whereas Frozen River was picked up by the accountably audacious Sony Pictures
Classics, Ballast emerged both from Sundance and New York's New Directors/New
Films series with a bevy of admirers and no distribution. Taking a note from
David Lynch, Hammer decided to self-distribute, sending the film to several key
art-house theaters (namely New York's Film Forum). It's a move that may be
remembered not for its acumen but its balls. That said, in a film climate that
allows banalities the likes of Meet Bill and The Babysitters to get backing,
perhaps DIY is the radical action needed. Is this some sort of Marxist overhaul
of studio protocol? Indie or death!
It's Gore-Tex.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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Another correction concerning BALLAST. I hate to be such a stickler for detail,
but actors depend on their credits to get work.
You wrote:(It begins with an attempted double suicide as Lawrence (Michael J.
Smith Sr.) walks into his bedroom to find his twin brother, Darius, dead from a
self-inflicted overdose and decides to follow suit with a gunshot to his chest.)
Should have read: At the beginning, we meet Lawrence (Michael J. Smith, Sr.), a
middle-aged black man despondent over news of the death of his identical twin,
Darius, by drug overdose. Lawrence is then caught in the midst of his own
suicide attempt by a kindly neighbor John (Johnny McPhail).
You left out the only professional actor, Johnny McPhail, the good neighbor
John.
Listed in the credits as a starring role--Cast: Michael J. Smith Sr.,JimMyron
Ross,Tara Riggs, Johnny McPhail
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