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Home arrow Reviews arrow Movies & Music arrow The Door in the Floor - Movie Review
The Door in the Floor - Movie Review PDF Print E-mail
Book Reviews - Movie and Music Reviews
Written by The Creole Cat   
The Door in the Floor
A film by Tod Williams

Director and screenwriter Tod Williams adaptation of the first part of John Irving's book A Widow for One Year, tells of one crucial summer during the marital separation of children's book author and illustrator Ted Cole and his wife, Marion. Grieving from the tragic loss of their teenage boys some years earlier, the couple are living separate lives now with their only link being their four year old daughter Ruth. Ruth is an absolute darling and was basically conceived to help mend their grief. She spends most of her time gazing over photos of her brothers who she never knew. I've always wondered how directors get child actors to perform such tricky roles as this, and explain to their young minds the concept of death. How much can and should you tell them at such a young age?

Ted is played by Jeff Bridges and he is a sweet, rugged old salt. He copes with his bereavement through drink, "engaging" in his models and maintaining his own distance in his studio. He also provides some much needed comic relief. Kim Basinger as Marion is absolutely beautiful. She just keeps getting better and better. She's wonderful at playing women who say very little; everything is conveyed through her gestures and facial expressions. I really enjoyed watching her.

Ted hires sixteen year-old Eddie to intern for the summer as his assistant, although he's barely given the task. Rather, he becomes Ted's official driver and falls under Marion's tutelage where she introduces him to his first sexual experience. We learn that Eddie was not only hired under the guise of being a chauffeur to Ted, but as a companion to the distant Marion. But towards the end of the film (when everyone typically confesses up to stuff), we also learn that Ted chose Eddie because his looks resembled one of the deceased sons. So theoretically, Marion slept with her son. Or her "proxy" son, whichever way you want to look at it. Until Ted made that revelation, I really didn't have a problem with Marion and Eddie being together. I figured they were useful to each other. And no one really seemed to be bothered by it all.

Ted maybe loopy, but he is the only consistently reliable force in Ruth's life; Eddie is, at once, intrigued, disturbed and disgusted by this family. And Marion is just apathetic to everything; the depth of her anguish has made her dead inside. She has no interest in salvaging her marriage or maintaining any kind of relationship with her daughter. On the one hand, I understand the relentless dynamics of grief and how people experience it in different ways and to different degrees. And whether mentally or physically or both, you do shut down for a period. But how is it that this woman was able to leave her child? If anything, you would think Marion would cling to Ruth even more so. Perhaps she felt she would not have been able to provide Ruth with the love she needed. Maybe the Irving book explains it.

From the white summer clothing Marion wears, to the black and white photos that adorn the walls of the house, to the East Hampton locale with its chilly white beaches, the texture of the film reminded me of a piece of gauze; rough, cold, thinly veiled and fragile.

A good character study film.
 
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