The Sweet Hereafter Reviews
Adapted from a novel based on true story. While quiet and delicate story telling, it's moving but cold and melancholic. Great cinematography and acting by Ian Holm.
This movie is so slow it may as well be in reverse.
This is an excellent film by all criteria: direction, camera work, acting. The performances are strong, particularly Ian Holm's. But get ready for some heavy melodrama and tragedy. I mean heavy, like a weight on your chest. The book had the same effect on me. After finishing it, I was almost sorry I read it. Are you in the mood for a movie about little kids getting killed in a school bus accident? Ask yourself before you watch this. Not exactly edifying subject matter----and, of course, there is no possibility of a happy ending. Not that happy endings are requisite, but be aware of what you're getting into. There is some really stupid folk/rock music on the soundtrack in the latter part of the film. It's supposed to be expository, but it throws off the whole mood.
It was hard to feel empathy for anyone in this story but it cleverly navigates the aftermath of a tragedy in a small community. Clear echoes of Fargo in the setting and local politics. A reasonable film but one I'll likely forget soon enough.
In Atom Egoyan's The Sweet Hereafter, lawyer Mitchell Stephens (Ian Holm) travels to a remote town in British Columbia to initiate a class action lawsuit on behalf of parents who lost their children in a tragic school bus accident. Rarely has a film generated such a sense of pathos. The feeling of loss and suffering and anger permeates virtually every frame of the movie. Egoyan's direction is pitch perfect as he uses slow zooms, languid camera movement and panoramic shots of the vast, snow-covered landscapes to establish a slow-burning sense of despair and anguish. There is no sense of healing or closure, only the realization that we sometimes simply have to accept the misfortunes that life offers. The Sweet Hereafter is, arguably, the greatest film to ever emerge from Canada.
"I did not have to go as far as I was prepared to go. But I was prepared to go all the way." Probably the single best pure dramatic turn in a film for Sir Ian Holm, and, quite unexpectedly, for Bruce Greenwood (who I always sort of thought of as a knockoff Sam Neill). The plot of The Sweet Hereafter is something else - a pseudo-investigational conflict in the aftermath of a tragedy that isn't driven by some sort of twist or hidden guilt so much as it is by the particular circumstances of its characters, the subplots, personalities, and individual responses to a tragedy that test the bonds of a larger community. There's no moment of idealistic 'togetherness', nor does the film feel as if it cheaply exploits disaster as a means of delivering dramatic performances; instead, it's an intelligent and bleak portrayal of suffering and the responses on both an individual and group level. Some of the literary elements may seem a bit of a reach given the storytelling elements that they add to an otherwise grounded and realistic story, but that's really a matter of preference. Tough to watch, but rewarding. (3.5/5)
The film that made 'Atom Egoyan' a relevant name during the 1998 Oscars. This character driven ride will probably press and challenge you on an emotional level that few films ever have.
From the rave reviews I expected more than this film delivered. I usually enjoy low key and slow but progressive screenplays, but this was lacking. Not sure what, but I wouldn't waste my time watching it. Music was pretty dire and grated except for a few instances where it seemed to fit okay.
1001 movies to see before you die. This was a sad movie about loss and reconciliation. It was well made. It was on Amazon.
No gust of wind can truly fall or sweep away the even ground. No days to come will ever make it right. This movie creeps along like beautiful, haunted poetry. Fascinating, real characters in a small Canadian town surviving disaster and deep grief after a horrible road accident. There's no escape from the drama, and feels riveting to keep watching. Secrets and shame surface. It all unravels so convincingly. And the voice narrative, using the words from The Pied Piper of Hamelin, adds so much to the depth and tragic subject matter.
A quiet drama about a small town which faces a tragedy and an out-of-town lawyer who litigates on behalf of the victims.
Tedium beyond belief. Perhaps I was tired when I watched this movie, late, but I found it dreadfully drawn out and dull.
I had the pleasure of revisiting this film I saw many moons ago. THE SWEET HEREAFTER is a simple story: A town experiences a terrible bus accident that kills some of its children, and a lawyer, Mitchell Stephens, visits the town after the tragedy to repair the damages financially for its citizens. But like all simple stories, there is something that is complex that lurks underneath more so than the hereafter. That something is grief, loss, death, addiction, greed....all the things we struggle with and wish to keep underneath. But in "the sweet hereafter," tragedy can breed "strange and new" things. A rebirth. A change. A call. A journey. An invitation. All these things sound familiar? Yes, indeed, as we all go underneath and head toward "the sweet hereafter." A stunning film!
Maybe my expectations, from the film reviews, were way too high, I failed to feel the advertised emotion
Atom Egoyan is considered a great filmmaker and The Sweet hereafter is one of the reasons why- This is a gut wrenching, hard hitting film that will make you ponder on complex issues that life throws at all of us. This is film making at its most powerful: drama capable of shaking the soul, yet free of even the slightest hint of manipulation, sentimentality, or mawkishness. The movie has an impact that extends far beyond the walls of a movie theater - a quality shared by a distressingly few of today's releases. The central event of The Sweet Hereafter is a school bus accident that results in the death of fourteen children and the injury of many others. On a cold winter's day in the small town of Sam Dent, British Columbia, the driver loses control of the vehicle and it careens off the road onto a frozen lake which gives way beneath the weight. The scene of the bus sinking into the water - a stark, simple shot - is one of the most painfully effective and disturbing sequences in any film this year. A lawyer(Ian Holm) arrives to tell the stunned community that there is a financial windfall available- which breaks the community on ethical lines. Stunning performances and a great understanding of directing by Egoyan make The Sweet Hereafter a must watch for anybody.
Hauntingly beautiful. Unmissable