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What
is "crazy"? What is "normal"? What if
the rapture hit and all that was left was a small group of
people we label as "crazy"? Are they then "normal"?
These are some of the questions Cullen Hoback explores in
Freedom State, a 55-minute independent digital production
shot in the Pacific Northwest.
One
morning eight mental patients get and find that their caretaker/nurse
isn't there to hand out their daily medications. The TV isn't
working. All is quiet outside. To top it off, they find a
glass eye made in, of all places, Rapture, Indiana. All the
clues lead to one thought: the world has ended and they are
the only ones left. They set out in a shortbus to find the
end of the world and to see if any other survivors might exist.
Before
setting out, the eight "survivors" divide themselves
into distinct roles so that they can function as a society.
Their President, Krystal (Megan Murphy), was your average
housewife at one point in her life, before her husband drove
her to loathing everything about her life. But once she, like
the other patients, enter into mental health care, they discover
that they can be the people that they want to be.
Freedom
State is
a playful film that calls on its audience to believe in the
empowering virtues of imagination and freedom. There is a
definite feeling of joy shared in the escape scene from One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest as well as a feeling
of determination found in Don Quixote.
Although
Freedom State is filled with eccentrics, for the most
part it doesn't feel overly eccentric or over-the-top. It
remains grounded through the simplicity in which the mission
is carried out. A couple of the characters come across as
a little much, but they are largely background characters
in the big picture. The danger of eccentricity is that they
become overdone and their roles feel more scripted than natural,
even in a piece of fantasy where the script is obvious. That
is the problem with these couple of characters. But the meaty
roles work out just fine finding the proper balance of natural
and fantastical.
The
film is ruled by dialogue, some of which is heavy and some
of which will just bring a light smile to your face. Freedom
State is certainly a comedy, but not one in which you'll
get a belly laugh. Rather it's one that makes you think and
grin at the same time.
©Movie
Views; October 19, 2006
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