The Healer Movie Review
The Healer Review
"The Healer" Overview

Rating: NR
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Agnieszka HollandProducer : Karel Dirka,Christopher Zimmer,Iwona Ziulkowska
Screenwiter : Agnieszka Holland
Starring : Miranda Otto,William Fichtner,Lothaire Bluteau,Ryan Smith,Bianca Crudo
Looking to go to bed depressed, moping, and on the verge of suicidal? Look no
farther than The Healer, a pedigreed movie with such a dark core than it's no
mystery it never merited a theatrical release of any consequence. (The original
title, Julie Walking Home, couldn't have helped either.)
Canadian Julie (Miranda Otto) returns home from a trip with her two twin
children, only to find husband Henry (William Fichtner) in bed with another
woman. Like that, her marriage is ruined. Days later, she discovers her son
(Ryan Smith) has cancer. Soon after that, we learn he's allergic to the
chemotherapy. Julie just can't catch a break. Julie hears about a faith
healer in Poland and decides to take her son there to get some healin'. (Why
Poland? Could have something to do with writer/director Agnieszka Holland
(Oscar nominated for Europa Europa in 1992), who hails from the country.)
Once in Poland, Julie develops a fondness for Alexei the healer (a questionably
charismatic Lothair Bluteau), who heals people for free in improptu sideshow
appearances. How likely is that? Well, about as likely as the rest of the
story, which has Alexei returning to Canada with Julie for the final act of the
film.
The problem with The Healer isn't just that it's absurd, but that it doesn't
contain a grain of happiness or, really, anything uplifting at all. The film
ends with nothing resolved and little hope for the characters. We have nothing
to do but try to expunge the memory of the film from our mind.
Fortunately, Otto is a lovely and talented actress (recalling a more accessible
Cate Blanchett), and her charisma keeps the film going for long stretches at a
time. Time, incidentally, passes in slow motion in The Healer -- it's 30
minutes before Julie gets the cancer diagnosis for her child. Holland is
content to let this story play out at its own pace, and that's fair enough, but
her lazy storytelling doesn't engender sympathy for Julie's plight nor interest
in the title character. In fact, once we meet the healer, he comes off as a bit
of a nitwit.
I've seen worse dramas (Anywhere But Here springs to mind), but The Healer is a
tragic (in both senses of the word) missed opportunity.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





