Things Behind the Sun Movie Review
Things Behind the Sun Review
"Things Behind the Sun" Overview

Rating: NR
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Allison AndersProducer : Daniel Hassid,Doug Mankoff,Robin Alper
Screenwiter : Allison Anders,Kurt Voss
Starring : Kim Dickens,Gabriel Mann,Don Cheadle,Alison Folland,Elizabeth Pena,Eric Stoltz,Rosanna Arquette
Allison Anders not only has enough balls to revisit one of the worst
experiences of her life in Things Behind the Sun, but she travels through
emotional territory normally unheard of in films based on rape -- namely a male
character who is a victim and a perpetrator at the same time.
As a woman, it is always difficult to watch a movie involving rape. When
filmed realistically, as Things is, it’s impossible to distance yourself from
the onscreen pain. And when a film is not constructed with realism the result
is anger from shoddy storytelling, or with a filmmaker failing miserably to
grasp the emotional honesty in a situation they can’t understand.
Owen (Gabriel Mann) works for a music magazine. A colleague wants to do a
story on Sherry (Kim Dickens), whose music has become popular on campuses after
building a following through the Florida bar scene. Sherry’s songs are filled
with emotional pain, based on having been gang-raped at a young age. Owen not
only knows her, but he was a forced perpetrator of the crime by his elder
brother Dan, (a chilling cameo by Eric Stoltz) so he ends up taking over the
story.
Sherry doesn’t appear as a victimized angel like other women have in films
about rape. She makes herself easily available for sex, especially after
alcoholically anesthetizing herself, despite the efforts of her well-meaning
boyfriend Chuck (Don Cheadle). She treats her fellow band members like peons.
And for some reason, once a year, keeps passing out drunk in front of a house
she can no longer recognize.
There is a fascinating emotional struggle as Owen attempts to help Sherry
remember the details of her worst experience, supposedly for her sake but also
to purge himself of the guilt that still doesn’t allow him to achieve orgasm.
After all, it is Sherry that initially influenced his appreciation for music,
and hence his adult life. It’s understandable that he would feel as if he owes
her some peace. Unfortunately, he cannot define what will give her that calm,
so this assistance is also pushed away.
Sherry’s turnaround to work for a healthy life is a bit forced, possibly
because after showing one self-destructive scene after another this change
seems so quick. By the same token, you need her to find some inner strength,
or the film becomes depressingly unwatchable.
This is a hard film to watch, and yet it adheres to a perspective important for
both men and women to see. It’s not a story of good versus evil, though it's
based on a horrible crime. Films like The Accused are powerful in that they
comment on the short-term effects of rape -- namely the immediate needs of the
victim. What sets Things Behind the Sun apart from such predecessors is that
it takes these stories one step further, to the severe aftermath of living with
these memories years later.
Reviewer: Rachel Gordon





