Friday, June 12, 2009

Home

A family living next to an abandoned highway are startled to find that it will open after 10 years of disuse. The noise and intrusion on their privacy (their house is only 40 feet from the road) begin to wear on them, destroying their initially close family structure.

At least that's the theory. In practice, it doesn't really hold up that well. For starters, the original "closeness" of the family is somewhat creepy, with mother, father, young brother and college-age sister bathing together. The reason for the family's expectation that the road would remain unused is never explained, nor is the reason the mother refuses to leave the house even after the intrusion.

Fair enough, some plot points are left as a given. I can chalk that up to the surrealist aesthetic, but the characters are alternately understated and shrill, and pretty hard to warm up to. They would feel more at home in a traditional drama, but for me they lack a bit of the flair and exaggeration they need to stand up against the surrealist backdrop.

It's not all bad. The plot stays together pretty well, and there are good moments throughout. Taken as a commentary on modern life (meaning: when you ignore the weak characters entirely) it's not bad, although the point it makes is maybe a little trite. The cinematography is good as well, and it may be worth seeing once, although probably not twice.

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