When a nun receives a letter of support from a convicted murderer on Death Row, she needs to find a way to comfort him as well as the victims’ families.
Heavy, real drama, supported by incredible acting. Dead Man Walking starts off with the beginning of a challenging relationship between Sister Helen Sejean and the convicted murderer on Death Row, Matthew Poncelet. Coming from totally different backgrounds and currently on opposite sides of the fence, this short-term relationship is meant to be tough, like no other relationship before it. And as if the plot is not morbidly unbearable, the subplot, how Sister Sejean deals with the heavy hits she receives, supports the plot and further burdens her and the audience’s soul.
There are some extremely short straws handed in this story: The two kids who got brutally murdered, their parents who suffer their unspeakable loss, Matthew’s family who suffer the consequences of his unspeakable action, Matthew himself who suffers for reasons you’ll get to know in the end, and, last but not least, Sister Sejean who stands right in the middle of it. It is through her that we get to experience everyone’s pain, and, ironically, the only person (except for the audience) who gets to experience hers is the person responsible for the inhumane acts and who is about to die. Sister Sejean burdens everyone’s suffering in her soul in an attempt to help everyone involved find peace in their hearts.
Based on Sister Helen Sejean’s homonymous book “Dead Man Walking”, writer/director Tim Robbins brings to life the shattering and soul-crashing real drama/horror that cost the lives of two young people and ruined the lives of so many around them. I must admit that it has been equally hard to watch it in the cinema back then, on a VHS a few years later, or on Blu-ray now. Dead Man Walking is a heavy drama that respects the audience’s intelligence without trying to proselytise, judge, or point you in any particular political or religious direction. Tim Robbins and Sean Penn were nominated for the Oscar, and Susan Sarandon got it.
Not that I have run out of newer films to watch, but every now and then, I enjoy going back to films that made me love cinema as a kid and get a first cinematic view of the world that I got to know – more like, still get to know. I might not be well known for my religious beliefs, but no matter the reason, anyone helping or trying to help a fellow human being is a person I want to help achieve it.
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Solidarity for all the innocent lives who suffer the atrocities of war!
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