Pale and luminescent, Mary basks in light, absorbs it, reflects it, generates
it. Penny, hard and glittery, winces in its bright glare, her harsh angles refract
it, distort it, shatter it into a thousand brittle shards. This tale of two orphaned
sisters, the younger stricken with illness, the older diseased with grief and responsibility
and loss, is a dance in several movements, and light is its constant partner. Beautifully
shot and exquisitely performed, The Book of Stars is an exploration of the
evanescence of life and the indelibility of love. Jena Malone's Mary is positively
incandescent, her presence a radiant gift. Mary's illness and isolation has imbued
her with precocious wisdom and uninhibited naïveté. The edges of her grim
reality are softened with a dreamy optimism for both the yesterdays and the tomorrows
she depicts in the scrapbook of the film's title. Penny, played with fragile defiance
by Masterson, has a gentle and poetic core but sharp and hardened edges. Her darkness
harbors nightmares that daylight cannot threaten. Unfortunately, the sisters' moments
of shining fancy and rushes of dark despair are muddied by emotional detritus. The
professor's tiresome lectures, the Hungarian refugee's stunning but superfluous visions,
and beautiful but indulgent shots impede the course of The Book of Stars.
Its arrow still finds the heart, but somehow it feels like overkill.
--Hollis Chacona
Film Vault Suggested Links
The Farmhouse 
Bitter Moon 
Ulee's Gold 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Michael Miner at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|