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Eye of God

United States

1998

84 Min
Color
1.85:1
German, English
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Tim Blake Nelson

PROD Wendy Ettinger, Michael Nelson

SCR Tim Blake Nelson

DP Russell Lee Fine

CAST Martha Plimpton, Kevin Anderson, Hal Holbrook, Mary Kay Place, Nick Stahl, Richard Jenkins, Maggie Moore, Margo Martindale

ED Kate Sanford

PROD DES Patrick Geary

MUSIC David Van Tieghem

Sundance (Dramatic Competition), San Francisco

Synopsis

Tim Nelson’s feature debut, Eye of God, is a methodical and carefully crafted, yet fully realized, portrait of a small town in the desolate Oklahoma oil fields It’s also a rarity in American independent cinema because it works on multiple levels without compromising any of its power or effectiveness.

An ostensibly simple story unfolds as the police interrogate a young boy found walking along the road bloody and in shock. As the sheriff, beautifully played by the old pro Hal Holbrook, gently prods his almost catatonic witness, we flash back to six months earlier when the town waitress, Ainsley, met for the first time her long-term correspondent, Jack, just paroled. The two had bonded by mail, and Ainsley had high hopes for a real relationship. Rehabilitated and deeply religious, Jack seemed genuinely eager to change his life and so, somewhat precipitously, they decided to marry.

Ainsley and Jack may not be compatible, but director Nelson has not chosen to tell a straightforward tale of suspense or discovery. Instead, as the story’s parallel lines interweave, a much deeper discourse and set of questioning begin to surface. Nelson displays a superb grasp of filmmaking structure and craft as he fashions a modern tale of spiritual discovery and doubt.

With a wonderful set of performances, especially by Martha Plimpton as Ainsley and Kevin Anderson as Jack, Eye of God is at once a dramatic story and cerebral contemplation. In this fluidly conceived film, our attention is continually refocused and redirected, and its subtle and nuanced narrative is full of distinctive, fully fleshed-out characters and delicately entwined stories. Rich and resonant, Eye of God is a work whose impact builds gradually, and the memories and thoughts it provokes will remain with you a long time. –Sundance Film Festival

Director

Original

Tim Blake Nelson

Tim Blake Nelson (born May 11, 1964) is an American director, writer, singer, and actor.
Nelson has appeared as an actor in the film, TV and theatre. He had a featured role as Delmar in the film O Brother, Where Art Thou?. According to directors Joel and Ethan Coen, he was the only one in the cast or crew who had read Homer’s Odyssey, a work upon which the film is loosely based.

He has directed film versions of his plays The Grey Zone, and Eye of God as well as writing and directing two original screenplays: 1998’s Kansas, and Leaves of Grass which was released in 2009. He is also the director of O, based on William Shakespeare’s play Othello but set in a modern-day high school. He is on the Board of Directors for The Actors Center in New York City, as well as Soho Rep Theatre. —Wikipedia 

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Hazel Hills

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