Tomorrow Movie Review
Tomorrow Review
"Tomorrow" Overview

Rating: PG
1972
Cast and Crew
Director : Joseph AnthonyProducer : Gilbert Pearlman,Paul Roebling
Screenwiter : Horton Foote
Starring : Robert Duvall,Olga Bellin,Sudie Bond,Richard McConnell
The DVD case of 1972'sTomorrow would have you believe that this film features
Robert Duvall's "breakthrough performance." Even putting aside The Godfather
(1972), THX 1138 (1971), M*A*S*H (1970), and To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), that
claim stretches credibility. Frankly, that's because Duvall isn't really very
good in the movie.
Neither is Olga Bellin, who plays Sarah Eubanks alongside Duvall's Jackson
Fentry. In the film, Sarah turns up on Jackson's farm, pregnant and abandoned
by her husband. Jackson takes her into his rickety shack and eventually aids in
delivering her baby. Ultimately a loving bond forms.
Alas, not before we've mentally checked out. Duvall's hicktastic accent (stolen
by Billy Bob Thornton in Sling Blade) is way too melancholy for a character
that isn't mean to be retarded. Bellin (this was her only motion picture)
doesn't fare much better. She's slow and glassy-eyed, drawling her way into
Jackson's arms. Maybe that's the point of this work (based fairly loosely on a
William Faulkner short story): That sad and slow people belong together.
The film does one thing well, and that's capture a different segment of
Depression-era society than we often see in films. We all know the Grapes of
Wrath migrant farm workers and the city-dweller shantytowns all too well.
Whether or not you care much about how mountain men whethered the economic
downturn (answer: didn't change nothin'), you have to admit that Tomorrow at
least offers a unique spin on the subject.
Incidentally, this was the last of six fairly unknown films from Joseph
Anthony's career.
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Review by Christopher Null
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