In the course of life, horrible, tragic events sometimes occur. We all know this
to be a fact of life, yet this knowledge doesn't make our acceptance of the truth
any easier to bear. Human beings seek reasons and culprits and causes in order to
make sense of our tragedies and restore reason to those who have entered the land
of the unthinkable. Few people understand this better than attorney Mitchell Stephens
(impeccably played by Ian Holm), who arrives in a small rural community in British
Columbia that has just experienced a gut-wrenching disaster in which 14 children
perish and many others become injured when their schoolbus inexplicably crashes into
a frozen lake. Promising compensation and retribution to the grief-stricken parents
if they allow him to represent them in a class-action suit, one might easily mistake
Stephens for little more than a well-oiled opportunist, yet he understands their
agony all too well. He struggles to make his peace with another kind of bereavement,
a living death, in which his daughter has been lost to drug addiction. The Sweet
Hereafter fashions a rich, haunting tale from this anguish, a tale whose exquisite
illumination transcends the mournful details of its storyline. Adapted by Canadian
filmmaker Atom Egoyan from the acclaimed novel by Russell Banks, the film represents
a career breakthrough for the director. Up until now, Egoyan has enjoyed a reputation
as a top-flight arthouse writer-director whose singularity of vision in such films
as Exotica, Speaking Parts, and The Adjuster has also fostered a sense of his works
as being somewhat remote and hermetic. With The Sweet Hereafter, Egoyan, for the
first time, adapts someone else's source material and even though he brings much
to the story that is clearly his own (which results in a decidedly "Egoyan film"),
it's still a story that manages to touch a more universal nerve. As Mitchell Stephens
goes from home to home, we, along with him, gradually piece together a patchwork
of understanding from the details of ordinary lives. Egoyan layers the story of the
Pied Piper into the film, a resonant analogy that was not in the book. He also discovers
beautifully cinematic storytelling devices such as the way the story of the disaster
is told by means of a fractured temporal structure and also the brilliantly unsettling
carwash sequence that opens the movie. The performances are all subtle jewels as
well; each actor carves out a fresh and unique character. I can think of no other
movie that has dared to analyze grief and its aftermath with such naked honesty and
precision, a film whose here and now so totally rebukes the notion of a sweet hereafter.
With a clarity of purpose and vision, Egoyan casts his line as though he were an
ice fisherman determined to plumb the unyielding surface fissures to find some life
that bites back from the underside of the cold, impenetrable Canadian frost.
4.5 stars
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Full Length Reviews
The Sweet Hereafter 
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Capsule Reviews
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Other Films by Atom Egoyan
Exotica 
Felicia's Journey 
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