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Hanah's gift

American flag (2008)
87 minutes

Back to Film, DVD & Video Reviews

by S. James Wegg
(08/30/08)

2 and a half stars

Stacy and Hanah
Stacy and Hanah

Remarkable premise can't find its payoff

Hanah (Alina Herrara), an autistic child, is able to find her way into the minds of those around her and see the world through their eyes.  Toby (Victoria Engelmayer, an exquisite motor mouth whose own apparent demise comes as a welcome relief), her constant companion (housed in the same institution for unwanted children) redefines hyperactivity and encourages her younger pal to keep tabs on the adults by floating into their heads.  Stacy (as evil incarnate, J.T. Williams can’t manage to induce a shiver), the leader of an anger management self-help group—fresh from recent patricide incited by paternal neglect—opts to off her entire class as her own deadly therapy for a miserable life (boyfriend Bobby—Wesley Stiller—assists in the mostly off-screen carnage with his blood-red, never coagulated, baseball bat).  One of her targets is Tyler (Melanie Wise offers the wisest range of acting skills yet seems none the worse for wear even after she “lost most of your blood”)—a firefighter with a temper who ignites the flame of fellow hothead and quipster Quillman (Brandt Willie)—Guess what?  He’s a writer!

Director/writer Zac Baldwin has taken on the considerable challenge of unfolding his story in real time and shows it exclusively from Hanah’s perspective.  Director of photography Paul Lohr has done a commendable job of being the silent girl’s eyes, but the narrative can’t sustain the conceit despite using some clever setups (e.g., “Shut your eyes, Hanah” as Tyler literally breaks the forgotten kids out of the house of death—the resultant black screen leaves the entire escape to the sound crew and our imagination) to work around tough shots.

From time to time, Baldwin’s social conscience seems about to make his film say something important (a long chase sequence stumbles into the lives of the neighbourhood’s homeless) about the world’s disenfranchised souls, but can’t find the lines or metaphors to lift the production into another world, much as Hanah’s “gift” puts her frail self into others’ shoes.

Let’s hope Baldwin’s next effort is driven more by a passionate need to tell a story than the technical feat of a singular point of view. JWR

Director/Writer

Zac Baldwin

Producer

Melanie Wise

Cinematography

Paul Lohr

Sound Mixer

Peter Rand

Film Editing

Todd Sali

Original Music

Zac Baldwin

Stunt Coordinator

G. Force

Main Cast

Alina Herrara, Victoria Engelmayer,J.T. Williams, Wesley Stiller, Melanie Wise, Brandt Willie

For further information: Official site

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