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Reviews Home (quotes pg.)
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Reviews - The New York Observer
On the Road with Alice—Rednecks and
R.V.’s Abound
by Andrew Sarris
A. Dean Bell’s What Alice Found, qualifies
as the latest example of an independent film of limited means and
unlimited artistry that has made this year of moviegoing so unpredictably
invigorating. It seems we’re passing through a period in which
low-budget productions shot on digital video provide more luminous,
lifelike characters, compelling drama and nuanced feelings than
what’s on offer in most mega-productions with big-star cachet.
Yet What Alice Found is hardly a cult B-picture
from the bygone days of double features—the acting and writing
are much too good for that, and the grown-up sex on display is explicit
without being degrading or exploitational. Still, as the title suggests,
there’s a fairy-tale quality to this rite-of-passage adventure
of menaced innocence that evokes a darker Alice in Wonderland, a
tale of malignant mysteries on the open highway traversed by cars,
trucks and R.V.’s (recreational vehicles), the latter carrying
the restless spirit of the narrative.
When we first see Alice (played by the 25-year-old
newcomer Emily Grace), she’s already in transit, filling up
her tank at a gas station. We later learn that she’s driving
away from her unhappy home in New Hampshire and her depressed, divorced
single mother (Jane Lincoln Taylor). While on the road, Alice never
calls home but does keep in contact with a girlfriend named Julie,
who’s already in Miami, the destination that Alice is heading
for (she plans to study marine biology at the University of Miami).
On the road, Alice encounters a car full of rednecks
shouting obscenities, but far from being fearful, she defiantly
gives them the finger as they speed past her. Sufficiently shaken
by the experience, she checks whether they’re waiting for
her at the next rest stop. When she returns to her car from the
bathroom, she finds that one of her tires has been punctured.
It’s at this point that Alice is befriended
by two seeming Good Samaritans, Sandra (Judith Ivey) and Bill (Bill
Raymond), a middle-aged couple traveling about in their R.V. ("everywhere
it doesn’t snow"). They tell Alice that they saw a rough-looking
young man lurking suspiciously around her car, and at one point
saw him stoop down—that could’ve been when he punctured
her tire, Sandra and Bill suggest. Alice—who is now truly
alarmed by the dangers facing her on the road—is grateful
for their attention, particularly when Bill changes her tire without
being asked, while the very talkative Sandra keeps trying to calm
her down. Sandra suggests that she follow their R.V. on the highway,
just in case she’s being stalked by the man who punctured
her tire. Alice agrees to follow them, but when her car completely
breaks down, and the R.V. disappears up ahead, Alice is seized with
panic—especially after a car stops ahead and a tall man emerges
out of the dark night. She flees to the bushes on the side of the
road an cowers there until she sees the R.V. returning. Bill and
Sandra emerge to confront the stranger at a distance and tell him
that his services aren’t needed; both the stranger and Alice
notice that Bill is packing a gun. The stranger departs, and Alice
hesitantly accepts Sandra’s offer to travel with them until
she reaches her destination.
Of course, Sandra and Bill are not exactly the Samaritans
they pretend to be; if they were, there would be no movie, and certainly
no suspense. But who are they exactly? This is where all the nuance
comes in: Alice isn’t exactly what she pretends to be, either.
As Alice enters the world of R.V. families and the
truck drivers who share their rest stops, she gradually realizes
that Bill procures male customers for Sandra in an orderly, business-like
fashion. But Bill and Sandra make no effort to recruit Alice for
their "business." Rather, it is she who jumps at the chance
to make more money than she’s ever dreamed of in her "honest"
job as a waitress.
The picture could go in so many disastrous directions
from this point on, with all the characters demolished in the sleazy
wreckage. A gun is flashed, a shot is fired, a great many lies are
exposed, but Sandra, Bill and Alice emerge not as a newfound family
exactly, nor as villains and victims, but as three ever-vulnerable
human beings doing the best they can to survive.
In this extraordinary season, it seems that
every other picture is blessed with what the critics herald as Oscar-worthy
performances. What Alice Found may never even be seen by most of
the academy’s voters—alas, they’ll be missing
a beautifully harmonized trio of performers in Ms. Ivey, Mr. Raymond
and Ms. Grace. These actors invest their beleaguered characters
with the dignity, strength and resilience to live their lives of
frantic desperation without surrendering to self-pity or self-hatred.
And if that’s not a form of heroism, I don’t know what
is.
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