
SLING BLADE (PG-13)
Director: Billy Bob Thornton
Stars: Billy Bob Thornton, Dwight Yoakam, John Ritter, Lucas Black, Natalie Canerday, J T Walsh, Robert Duvall, James Hampton, Rick Dial, Jim Jarmusch, Christy Ward
Running Time: 135 minutes.
Actor/writer Billy Bob Thornton's screenplays for
the tense and violent thriller One False Move and the
wonderful but largely ignored drama A Family Thing
essentially explored themes of reconciliation with the
past. Thornton makes his directorial debut with Sling
Blade, a perceptive but grim tale of redemption and
small town bigotry that also resonates with some
brutal truths about prejudice and the problems that
institutionalised people face when trying to readjust to
a society that remains distrustful and suspicious.
Thornton is an unobtrusive director who maintains
an unhurried pace throughout this honest but down
beat tale that seems to echo some of the themes of
the classic To Kill A Mockingbird.
This powerful and moving drama centres around the
mildly retarded but normally gentle Karl Childers
(beautifully played by Thornton himself), who
brutally murdered his mother and town bully
twenty-five years ago. Now Karl has been declared fit
to resume his place in society and is he is released
from the institution that has become his home. The
slow moving, slow talking Karl returns to his small
home town, but finds that settling in is far from easy.
He gets a job repairing lawn mowers at a small garage
run by the genial Bill Cox (Rick Dial), a friend of the
asylum's administrator.
The pivotal experience for Karl comes when he
makes a friend with 12 year old Frank Wheatley
(Lucas Black, from American Gothic), a lonely boy
who desperately needs a father, and his widowed
mother Linda (Natalie Canerday), who is trying to
cope with her responsibilities and the haunting
memory of what happened to her husband. At
Frank's request Karl reluctantly moves into the
Wheatley's garage. While the Wheatley's accept Karl
without judgement and make him feel part of their
family, Linda's boyfriend, the volatile, drunken,
brutal, intolerant redneck bully Doyle (singer Dwight
Yoakam) is not so happy about the situation. Karl
intuitively recognises something of his own troubled,
brutal childhood and repressive upbringing in the
tense atmosphere that dominates the Wheatley
household. Perceiving the very real danger that Doyle
represents, Karl has to confront the actions of his
own troubled past and act to protect the innocent
Frank.
Karl Childers is one of the most unusual characters
created for an American film in quite some time, and
Thornton's emotionally felt performance is superbly
judged. His deliberately halting speech, cowered
posture, awkward gait and mannerisms seem
thoroughly natural and unforced. Thornton imbues
his flawed, simple and misunderstood character with
human qualities and this is the type of assured and
sympathetic performance that normally wins
accolades. It is probably unfortunate that he was up
against Geoffrey Rush in the Oscar race, because in
any other year his superb, complex yet sympathetic
performance would have won. The momentum was
with Rush's brilliant performance of tortured pianist
David Helfgott, but as a consolation prize, Thornton
won an Oscar for brilliantly adapting his own stage
play for the screen.
In fleshing out characters partially drawn from his
own experiences growing up in America's deep south,
Thornton has opted for some deliberately off beat
casting choices that ultimately pay rich dividends.
John Ritter (best known for his work in tv sitcoms)
has an honesty and vulnerability as Vaughan, the gay
supermarket manager who has also experienced the
bitter bigotry and unthinking prejudice of small town
America. Cast largely against type, Yoakam is a
revelation as the brutal and unsympathetic Doyle, and
he suffuses the character with a dangerously volatile
edge that lends a palpable atmosphere of intense
emotions and barely restrained violence to his scenes.
Robert Duvall contributes a small cameo as Karl's
cruel and abusive father, who remains unrepentant
about his actions, while cult director Jim Jarmusch
crops up briefly behind the counter of a fast food
restaurant. J T Walsh (from Dark Skies, etc) is eerie
as the murderer Bushman, Karl's friend at the
asylum, whose cold- blooded and unrepentant
demeanour offers a stark contrast to Childer's more
innately gentle manner.
There is a quiet insistence and unrelenting grimness to
this ultimately moving and haunting tale, as audiences
feel compelled to follow Karl Childers on his tortured
path to redemption and deliverance. While it seems to
chart vaguely familiar territory, Sling Blade is an
original, insightful, extraordinarily haunting and
poignant drama that contains an emotional punch that
resonates long after the final credits roll. One of the
year's best films!
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission