Sister Helen Movie Review
Sister Helen Review
"Sister Helen" Overview

Rating: NR
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Rebecca Cammisa,Rob FruchtmanProducer : Rebecca Cammisa,Rob Fruchtman
Screenwiter :
Starring : Helen Travis
If you think all nuns are silent-vowed, virginal do-gooders like Mother
Theresa, think again. Here comes Sister Helen, a foul-mouthed widow in New York
City who stands toe to toe with druggies and alcoholics as she runs a shelter
for men trying to get clean.
This documentary dutifully tracks Helen Travis's later years as she operates
the shelter, a grim building on a desolate corner of the city. Her frequent
run-ins with the residents as she enforces curfews and demands urine samples
are colorful ("When I say piss, you piss!"), but you'll probably get the
picture after about 20 minutes. Spend much longer with Travis and you'll
probably start to feel she's being made fun of a little, like a live flesh
version of one of those punching nun hand puppets. That's not far from the
truth: Helen is world-weary and streetwise, and before long we get it, that
tough love is the only way to get crackheads and junkies to clean up their act.
One interesting, if sad, aspect of the film is that it tracks Travis all the
way through her death, so even though there are plenty of extras on the new
DVD, don't expect a reunion with Travis to discuss "what happened next." (Her
shelter continues to operate under the care of her daughter, some of the
junkies are clean, some aren't.) And there you have it: One nun, one tenemant
building, and one incredibly aggressive management style. She's got one big
lesson to share with us (love hurts), but deeper meaning is a little trickier
to find.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



