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ATONEMENT 3 Stars – Thought Provoking When we destroy another person’s life by our lies it is difficult
to
atone
for
our
sins.
This
is
due
in
part
because
we
are
incapable
of
giving
back
the
days
and
years
stolen
from
them
because
of
our
transgression.
But
it
is
also
difficult
because
of
the
universal
experience
of
needing
divine
assistance
in
finding
forgiveness,
not
only
in
receiving
it
from
the
person
we
wronged
but
also
in
extending
it
to
ourselves. This is the message of Joe Wright’s Oscar-nominated
film
“Atonement.” Based on the novel by British author Ian McEwan, the story
walks
us
through
the
betrayal
of
a
young
thirteen-year-old
girl,
Briony
Tallis
(Saorise
Ronan
at
age
13,
Romola
Garai
at
age
18,
Vanessa
Redgrave
as
an
older
adult),
whose
curiosity
and
jealousy
causes
her
to
lie
about
her
older
sister’s
lover.
The
consequences
are
not
only
immediate
but
also
life-long
as
the
Second
World
War
made
it
improbable
that
she
could
ever
make
things
right
again.
Like
ripples
in
a
pond
that
travel
in
ever-expanding
circles,
her
lies
rippled
not
only
away
from
her
but
also
back
upon
her
as
her
life
becomes
impaled
on
the
guilt
of
her
deception. Creatively presented on film with visual and auditory effects
that
mark
the
interplay
of
memories
with
fantasies,
the
power
of
the
tale
is
magnified.
Using
a
manual
typewriter
in
1935
to
hone
her
skills
as
a
writer,
Briony’s
imagination
becomes
both
her
savior
and
her
demon
as
it
taps
its
way
through
her
life. Having a childhood crush on Robbie Turner (James
McAvoy),
Briony
has
a
disturbing
reaction
when
she
finds
him
with
her
older
sister
Cecilia
(Keira
Knightley).
This
jealous
wound
turns
destructive
when
she
claims
to
have
witnessed
him
committing
a
crime
which
he
did
not
do.
This
accusation
and
subsequent
arrest
takes
his
life
not
only
from
him
but
from
her
sister
Cecilia
as
well. Struggling to find a way to atone for her sin as she grows
into
a
woman,
Briony’s
novels
explore
the
deeper
sorrows
and
unfulfilled
longings
of
life.
But
it
is
her
first
and
final
novel,
“Atonement,”
that
is
her
ultimate
offering. It exposes both her sin and her longing to
atone
for
the
lie
that
has
for
so
long
defined
her
life. As her fiction expresses her longing to give
both
Robbie
and
Cecilia
back
their
lives,
this
desire
proves
to
be
only
a
fantasy
which
neither
atones
for
her
sin
nor
restores
those
she
harmed. Atonement is ultimately a theological term used to describe
God’s
intervention
when
we
sin
against
someone. That it requires God’s solution is clearly presented in this film
as
we
realize
Briony’s
impotent
solution
is
only
fiction. For real restoration and forgiveness, we need
far
more
than
our
wishes
and
inadequate
attempts
to
intervene.
DISCUSSION:
________________ Cinema In Focus is a social and spiritual movie commentary.
Hal
Conklin
is
former
mayor
of
Santa
Barbara
and
Denny
Wayman
is
pastor
of
the
Free
Methodist
Church.
For
more
reviews:
http://www.cinemainfocus.com.
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