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Religious right roots >>
A Montreal filmmaker ventures south in the documentary Unbuckling My Bible Belt |
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GOD, GUNS AND GAYS: Unbuckling
My Bible Belt by MATTHEW HAYS Those who populate the southern
United States have long proven fodder for lazy screenwriters. Nothing
conjures up stupidity and inbreeding better than giving a character a
southern accent, from the shenanigans of The Beverly
Hillbillies to Hillary SwankÕs lecherous, money-grubbing family
in Million Dollar Baby. Thus it comes as a relief to
watch Montreal filmmaker Patricia TassinariÕs exploration of one extended
family in the American South, Unbuckling My Bible
Belt. In it, Laura Kathryn MitchellÑan American ŽmigrŽ who settled in
Montreal over 15 years agoÑventures to several American states to meet up
with members of her extended family. The doc begins with powerfully poignant
moments, as we see glimpses of Mitchell as a young girl in Super 8 footage.
Mitchell then introduces us to a number of members of her family and,
naturally, there are many differences with their political and religious
beliefs. ItÕs all about guns, God and gays, and Mitchell encounters all
three. Some speak of hearing GodÕs voice in their heads, speaking to them;
one preacher describes the coming Rapture; another shows off her Jesus fridge
magnet. To TassinariÕs credit, she
doesnÕt stoop to caricature or crude derision of those in this doc. Instead,
there is nuance and dimension; one elder woman speaks of having to defend her
support of the Clintons. Another young man speaks of the ÒstupidityÓ of the
war in Iraq. And Mitchell even has a gay relative, who describes survival
strategies. Still, thereÕs no escaping the
Idiot Factor, and when people speak proudly of putting a Christian (that
would be Bush) in the White House (when was there a non-Christian President
in the White House?) it just gets flat-out irritating. For Quebec audiences,
hearing self-declared, God-fearing Christians speak of the justification for
the invasion of Iraq will simply be infuriating. ÒJesus doesnÕt expect
anybody to be a doormat,Ó one woman surmises. Tassinari and Mitchell donÕt
expect to convert anyone. Rather, Unbuckling emerges
as a series of telling portraits of a group of people weÕre not expected to
fully comprehend. Unbuckling My Bible Belt opens this
Friday, Dec. 14 at Ex-Centris |
MIRROR ARCHIVES È Dec 13 Dec 19 2007 : INSIDE
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