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Brigham City
(2001)
Director: Richard Dutcher
Cast: Richard Dutcher, Matthew A. Brown, Wilford Brimley
When you hear the term "Christian movie",
what immediately goes through your head? Even if
there are regular churchgoers among the regular
readership of this web site, I think it's safe
to say that what goes through our heads is
decidedly negative. Oh, sure, there is the
infamous If Footmen
Tire You... What Will Horses Do?,
which was filled with an incredible number of
unintended laughs, like I'm sure a few other
Christian movies have done in the past. But
those particular Christian movies are only fun
to watch because they are bad in a particularly
twisted way, not because of anything genuinely
good about them. When you think about other
Christian movies, you'd be hard-pressed to think
about anything genuinely positive to say about
them. Poor production values seems to be a
constant factor, no doubt due both to the low
budgets and the limited filmmaking experience of
the people behind the camera. As for the people
in front of the camera, their performances tend
to just as experienced and polished as the
members of their fellowship behind the camera.
Though what really ultimately sinks these
Christian movies is that their screenplays tend
to be unengaging, written seemingly from
graduates from the Jack Chick School of
Screenwriting. That is, things happening in the
stories and with the characters that are so
hokey and contrived that you refuse to get
emotionally involved, and dead halts to the
narrative to preach the Word for minutes on end
that only get you to the Creator by boring you
to death.
This kind of thing happened for a long time,
in part because the idea of making these movies
less preachy seemed blasphemous to many
Christians, and because they always knew they
would get positive reviews for their movies from
boneheads like Michael Medved, no matter how
boring or badly-made the product might be. But
just a few years ago, Christian filmmaking
started to take a turn in a different direction.
Some of the people in this field realized that
(1) they weren't exactly attracting new converts
with these movies, and (2) many Christians
themselves were shunning these movies in favor
of something more entertaining, even if what
they chose was undecidedly unChristian in
content. The most logical thing to do was to
make their movies more entertaining than
preachy. The ball really started rolling in this
direction with the 1999 release of The
Omega Code. Not only did its cast
contain recognizable stars (including Casper Van
Dien and Michael Ironside), the Torah-centered
plot centered more around suspense and action
than preaching, and it ended up grossing a
whopping $12 million in just 450 theaters. Its
success has inspired other Christian filmmakers
to make movies of a more entertaining nature,
including the sports-related Extreme Days
to the computer animated Jonah: A
VeggieTales Movie.
That's not to say that these movies happen to
be good. Having only seen two of these
new-breed Christian movies to date, I can't
confirm this, but reports generally claim that
the majority of these movies are still pretty
wretched. I saw evidence of this for myself when
I watched Meggido: The Omega Code 2,
which I sought out mainly because I heard Franco
Nero (Compaņeros)
was in the cast; as it turned out, he was the
only decent element in an otherwise humdrum
apocalyptic tale punctured only by the
occasional unintended laugh. Still, these movies
seem to be no worse than much of the
non-Christian dreck in video stores, and the
intended-entertainment nature of these movies
has resulted in them being more available in
video stores, which of course means more people
are seeing them. It's a start, and maybe with
time the general quality of these movies will
increase. Proof of this possibility can be seen
in Brigham City, the other
new-breed Christian movie I've watched. It is
extremely well-crafted in two areas; not only
does it have a story that keeps you interested,
but it has a religious angle that interests and
educates you without ever coming across as
preachy or as "homework".
Most Christian films deal with the aspects of
the faith in a fairly broad way, probably
so
there is less chance of alienating any viewers
from a specific Christian following. As you may
have guessed, this is not the case with
Brigham City; it was made by Mormon
filmmakers, and deals with Mormon characters.
However, it's not really about Mormons
and the Mormon faith; it's more about how
individuals, who happen to be Mormon, react to a
particular terrifying crisis. Despite the title,
the events do not take place in the actual city
of Brigham City in Utah, but a small town
elsewhere in Utah named Brigham. It's a
predominantly Mormon town; in fact, Wes (Dutcher,
who also wrote and directed the movie) is not
only the town sheriff, he is also the Bishop for
one of the community's chapels. Up to now, it's
been a nice quiet place, where the only tension
comes from the town's grumpy retired sheriff Stu
(Brimley, Cocoon), who is bored
and restless now that he can only stay involved
in policing by doing odd jobs in the sheriff's
office. The calm and tranquility is shattered one day
when Wes, returning from a routine call,
discovers an abandoned out-of-state car parked
in a field... and a
brutally murdered woman nearby. Shocked and
upset, Wes immediately contacts the county
authorities and the F.B.I., and is happy to have
them take it out of his hands. Managing to cover
up the discovery to all but a few townspeople,
Wes thinks things can now get back to normal...
until the following day, where another discovery
informs Wes and the rest of the townspeople that
they have a serial killer in their midst.
One thing viewers of Brigham City
may not be expecting is how it chooses to
portray both Mormons and those individuals who
do not follow the faith. Though there is a
passing mention of how the community has, in a
way, made itself separate from the outside world
(and its various troubles), the various
outsiders that appear are not portrayed in a
real negative way. The imported housebuilders
working at the edge of town are shown to drink
beer and get into the occasional fist-fight, but
Wes' investigation of them digs up nothing
really negative about them - even their Mormon
foreman speaks well of them. The FBI agent (Tayva
Patch, Little Secrets) who comes
in to lend a hand to the investigation is a
woman who is proud of her background (she speaks
fondly of her Manhattan upbringing), yet
respectful and uncritical of the Mormons - and
leaves on an equally good note at the end of the
movie without becoming a Mormon convert.
While she admits to Wes she can't understand
their preference to stay out of the outside
world, she also admits maybe she's a little
naive. Wes, for that matter, admits that maybe
their relative isolation has left them
naive to a different degree. Certainly, while
being Mormon has given them things like a strong
sense of community and brotherly love, things
are not perfect besides the fact one of them
seems to be a killer. They are shown to sin (one
secretly engaged in a hobby frowned upon by Utah
and a few other states), and the movie even
admits that God won't always answer their
prayers, even in desperate situations.
Wes himself is not in an ideal situation,
even before he finds the first body. He has to
use a metal brace on one leg because of a past
car
accident, an accident that also killed his wife and son.
Though he stays in close contact with the people
he works with and with his parishioners, it's
clear he's a lonely man. Not only that, but he's
weighed down with the trauma of the past and
with of all the responsibilities he currently
has in his two roles - and there's no sign that
his faith can lift the burden, at least by
itself. Besides giving the movie an extra edge
of honesty, it keeps the character of Wes
humble, and our sympathies stay with him at all
times. There's nothing about Wes that strikes us
out of the ordinary, and that's what makes him
more compelling than your typical Hollywood
lawman. While he's a sheriff, he still doesn't
find the investigation process easy, such as
when he decides to collect every beer bottle
from the local tavern one night, then dust each
one for prints and scan them with the F.B.I.
agent's computer. Not only is it a taxing task
(we see for ourselves how much effort and time
is needed), he knows right from the beginning
that they will only get circumstantial evidence
- at best. Performing the character he wrote,
Dutcher is pretty decent. He and the
almost entirely amateur cast are occasionally a
bit rough around the edges, but this roughness
actually fits well with these characters, who
are more down-to-earth and less sure of
themselves and things than your typical
cinematic protagonists.
Dutcher didn't write a mystery that presents
clues (at least of real substance) that offer
the viewer to chance to solve the mystery before
it actually happens onscreen, a la movies like
The Last Of Shelia. Instead, he
uses a number of different techniques to
maintain a tense and uneasy feeling that keeps
you alert and wondering what will happen next.
The bodies are discovered without
sensationalism; everything from the camera
movements to the music is greatly subdued, with
only a limited (and tasteful) look at each
scene. Instead, we're made to look at the silent and sickened
faces of the investigators and onlookers; it hits
home with surprising force. I think a big part
of the movie's great feeling of unease also
comes from how Dutcher maintains a feeling of
isolation and unpreparedness, even in the
lighter moments. It's a place far from
any big city, with only one sheriff and a
deputy. The hills surrounding the town are bare.
Except for the celebration of the town's
birthday, nowhere in the streets can you hear
traffic or voices. It's a pretty place, yet you
sense something unsettling. Speaking of the
visuals, while the photography of the
movie isn't quite ready for theaters (the look
of the movie more resembles that of a television
drama) Dutcher at least deserves praise for
getting it to look that good when you realize he
had less than a million dollars to spend on the
actual production.
In other scenes, Dutcher puts a spin on
something familiar, like the scene when Wes
finds
himself having to tell a couple that their
daughter has been murdered; it doesn't go quite
to plan, and the sequence manages to ingeniously
underline that previously mentioned part of Wes
that seems to feel helpless. The climax is a
bravura piece of writing and directing. Not only
does it contain some surprising twists, it
manages to be horrifying in many different ways,
right down to a certain noise heard right after
the struggle comes to an end. Though as
great as that sequence is, and the generally
constant gripping tone, I should mention that
over the course of the 2 hours, there are a few
moments that don't work. Maybe it's only because
I've seen so many mystery movies before
Brigham City that I knew that the brash
non-Mormon construction worker was an obvious
red herring, or that when the F.B.I. agent gets
a flat tire and one of the town's residents
pulls up and slowly goes through the motions of
helping her out, that it would turn out that the
guy just happened to have the quirk of walking
slowly when carrying a tire iron.
As for that religious angle... I would say
that it actually enriches the movie. The only
instance when it could be considered distracting
is the scene where the F.B.I. agent attends
services at Wes' chapel for the first time, but
only because the sequence goes on for a bit too
long. Despite its overlength, the sequence
remains interesting because the Bible discussion
does bring up some pointed questions (like: Must
we lose our innocence to gain wisdom?) that even
non-religious people will find interesting to
think about. The firm belief these characters
share sometimes makes them do things somewhat
differently than you'd normally think. One of
these moments is when Wes, getting desperate,
rounds up a number of the townspeople and asks
them to go house to house and search each one
thoroughly - without warrants. As it turns out,
practically all the residents freely let their
neighbors search their houses, because as Wes
puts it, "It's the right thing to do." Then
there is the final sequence in Wes' chapel, and
the religious setting gives the movie a
beautiful and emotionally powerful ending
without one word needed to be uttered. If in the
future they can make them as good as
Brigham City, I would really be
interested in seeing more religious movies.
Also reviewed at:
Cold Fusion Video Reviews
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See also:
Dr. Cook's Garden,
Skeletons,
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