Higher Ground Reviews
It is watchable but the viewer is trying to find out what is the message of this exercise. A religious woman, member of a small fundamentalist congregation decides to leave her husband after many years of marriage because apparently he doesn’t satisfy her sexually. It doesn’t seem that she rejects the tenets of their common faith. She has an income from sources that are never discussed in the film and she doesn’t find a job. Her very good female friend ends up paralyzed after brain surgery and she doesn’t see her again on a one to one basis. Her only interaction with her friend after the surgery is to play a song on the accordion over the phone. If any of these make sense to you, you will enjoy the movie more than me.
The topic of "being religious" is not as totally overbearing as it could have been. My main enjoyment came from hearing hymns from my childhood, but for most I can see it as totally boring.
The bible bashing element and singing got on my nerves all the time. No wonder these people are viewed are weirdo's. I am sure you can have faith without singing about God every two minutes. Vera Farmiga was fabulous in this movie though. I felt the movie lost something when Dagmara character Annika became brain damaged. It told an interesting story but as a non religious person I couldn't relate. Still takes all kinds of movies.
2011 featured a number of stellar directorial debuts. I've sung the praises of Sean Durkin's masterful Martha Marcy May Marlene for months now, but J.C. Chandor's Margin Call, Joe Cornish's Attack the Block, and John Michael McDonagh's The Guard were all varying degrees of intriguing and entertaining. Another of last year's directorial debuts that I've been curious about for a while is Vera Farmiga's Higher Ground. Farmiga, of course, is a fine actress, and for her first behind-the-camera outing, she chose a character study about a woman grappling with issues of faith within an evangelical community. Would if I could say it was better than average, but somewhere in a sea of half-hearted statements on religion and empowerment, the story gets lost, and worse, we stop caring. Farmiga also stars in the film. She plays our main character, Corinne, a middle-aged mother of three who has for decades wrestled internally with her thoughts on religion and God. Born into the Church, Corinne (played as a high school girl by Farmiga's daughter, Taissa) opens up to God during her childhood, while most of her fellow classmates stay silent. But when her parents begin fighting and she starts seeing a boy, her faith is put on hold. It's only after she gives birth to her first daughter with high school rocker boyfriend Ethan (Boyd Holbrook as a high schooler, Joshua Leonard as an adult) that they find God once again. They nearly lose their child in a bus accident, so they decide to spend the rest of their lives praising and thanking God for the miracle of life. They join a tightly knit community of fellow evangelical Christians, where women are secondary to men, and your fellow man is secondary to God. It's there that Corinne begins to have another crisis of faith as she sees the Holy Spirit in all those around her but can't find it within herself. With a plot description like that, it must seem as if much of Higher Ground involves that which is internalized. It's true, but there's also a great deal of interpersonal conflict. Corinne finds herself an accidental lightning rod of criticism. She doesn't wait her turn to speak like so many of the other women around her, and she's OK not wearing a dress that buttons all the way up to her neck. This is part of the reason she struggles to fit in, and in many ways, the negative things her friends and neighbors say about her are true. She is different, she might not belong, and God might not be as present in her as He is in them (if that's the sort of thing you believe). Farmiga is fine in front of the camera. This is far from her best performance (The Departed and Up in the Air were much better showcases for her talents), but she's solid. Everyone around her plays a caricature of sorts, so I can't say I was enamored with the film's acting. And directorially, Farmiga is generally straightforward, but she had a hard time keeping her camera still-inexplicably opting for these very slow pans across, which I didn't think served any purpose. I'd say the jury is still out on Farmiga as a director. She didn't really show me much with this film, but the problems I had with it dealt more with the story itself than the way she visually expresses it. Ultimately, this is a film I just couldn't connect with. I don't doubt there are those who will find a great deal to admire and discuss, but I consistently felt at a distance from it, and it didn't do enough to help me bridge that distance. http://www.johnlikesmovies.com/higher-ground-review/
Smart film about the conflict that a woman finds concerning her faith and her belonging to a some kind of extremist christian church. Some religious meetings and songs could be boring but are needed to show the bigotry of the church leaders against the disonant opinions.
The movie was interesting in the beginning but then I became confused and lost... So there was some disappointment in the end...
Interesting study of a faith that starts to flag in the face of maturity and intelligence.
An intriguing, if ultimately unsuccessful take on religion and how one woman (Vera Farmiga) begins to struggle with her faith while living within a somewhat cultish group of people. Farmiga shows she is a capable director, and her performance is outstanding, but ultimately the movie feels too simple, like she is settling instead of going all-in and taking real risks. In the end, the film benefits from its character development and remains interesting even if it is slowly paced, but ultimately it is just an average offering on the topic of religion that is not too memorable. Far from bad, but skipable.
Vera Farmiga makes an extremely impressive directorial debut with this low budget film. An examination of both self and faith, this movie is both enlightening and entertaining. A must see.
HIGHER GROUND is that rare film that depicts the difficulty of being human. By tracing one woman's struggle with her faith, Farmiga, explores friendship, family, career, art, and culture, and the importance of it all when trying to become a fully rounded human being. Avoiding stereotypes and cliches, HIGHER GROUND continually surprises in its analysis of religious faith. All the characters are fully rounded people--not bad or good--just human trying to make sense of it all. The film has the guts to show how difficult all decisions can be and the compromise inherent in life. This is a true indie in that it explores what mainstream films never do in a true in-depth way. It's not a perfect film, like many first time directors, Farmiga explains too much at times and includes cut-ins that do little to but emphasize what is already apparent but in other ways Farmiga shows the hand of an old master. HIGHER GROUND is subtle, caring, and most importantly, human and well-rounded. A lovely film.
Higher Ground does not ask the viewer to believe a certain way, but simply exhibits a woman's journey of faith without much bias.
Film interessante, che tratta con sensibilità un tema delicato come la fede. Lo fa raccontanto il percorso di vita di Corinne, da adolescente a donna adulta e madre, e il suo senso di insoddisfazione e frustrazione nei confronti di un Dio con cui, nonostante tutti i suoi sforzi, sente di non riuscire a comunicare. Offre buoni spunti di riflessione, in particolare sulle differenze nel modo di rapportarsi alla fede. Il ritmo lento e la durata (forse eccessiva) lo rendono un po' pesante, anche se non manca qualche momento divertente. Nel complesso il mio giudizo è positivo.
What a load of fundamentalist insincere rubbish, this is a classic case of someone who thinks they know about the Christian faith and in reality has no idea, the cliche ridden script makes me want to spew and if some ' Christian ' addressed me the way these blokes do I'd be running a mile from church. Do the writers REALLY think this is typical Christian behavior ? because this is so obviously ACTED its a joke. I literally had to stop myself gagging when listening to the insincere, syrupy slop that these " Christians" used to address each other...
Really well made indie movie about the nature of faith. Vera Farmiga's directorial debut is perfectly observed and slowly heartbreaking. If Jesus is the definitive answer to all questions, and if you're intelligent, then it narrows down the diversity of questions you can ask.
A deconversion story that isn't always perfect or subtle, but it's genuineness and honesty make up for its shortcomings.