Manna From Heaven Movie Review
Manna From Heaven Review

"Manna From Heaven" Overview

Rating: NR
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Gabrielle Burton,Maria BurtonProducer : Charity Burton,Gabrielle Burton,Jennifer Burton,Maria Burton,Ursula Burton
Screenwiter : Gabrielle B. Burton
Starring : Maria Burton,Ursula Burton,Seymour Cassel,Shelley Duvall,Jill Eikenberry,Louise Fletcher,Frank Gorshin,Faye Grant,Harry Groener,Hallee Hirsh,Shirley Jones,Phil LaMarr,Cloris Leachman,Wendie Malick,Vincent O'Neil,Austin Pendleton
The five precocious Burton sisters of Buffalo, NY have given us a precocious
film about a group of people so hateful we are forced to try our best to simply
ignore them. How's that for skipping the first day of Filmmaking 101?
Manna From Heaven is the story of a Buffalo family who one day discover $20,000
"raining from heaven," wisely decide to split it up, and then go on their merry
ways. A decade or so later, every last one of them has grown up to be a loser,
having squandered his or her (mostly her) share of the loot. The lone
exception is Theresa (Ursula Burton... well of course the good one is going to
be played by a Burton sister!) who has become an ash-on-the-forehead nun. In
fact, Theresa becomes convinced that the 20 grand of so long ago was not a gift
but a loan, and that they must now "pay it back."
Upon such a threadbare plot hinges the remainder of the film, wherein the
family decides to throw a car raffle, a dance contest, a poker game, and
collect door-to-door donations in order to raise the money to pay back... well,
they're going to pay somebody back. But naturally, everyone has a hidden
agenda and tries to get the money for herself... and let me tell you, you
haven't lived until you've seen Cloris Leachman begging for change on behalf of
"Grannies in Need." (Note to the sisters Burton: Are you really paying it back
if you get it from other people? Discuss at your next family dinner.)
Such banal plot points are matched only by the characters of Manna From Heaven,
each more loathsome than the next. It's amazing that with talents like Seymour
Cassel, Shelley Duvall, Louise Fletcher, and Wendie Malick there wasn't more
that could have been done to salvage this ship, but honestly, the root of the
problem lies in a script so foul that it's amazing the film is as good as it
actually is. Which is to say: this close to scraping bottom.
From SXSW 2001.
Draw near and bear witness: Shirley Jones is not dead!
Reviewer: Christopher Null



