HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG
---------------------
'She's a bird, a broken one. Grandfather said that when a bird flies into
your arms, it is
an angel.' Colonel Massoud Amir
Behrani
'Are you Cathy Kathy Nicolo? Is this your house?' a policeman asks a sad
young woman who sits overlooking a modest bungalow encased in fog and
flashing police car lights. Making his feature directorial debut, Vadim
Perelman leaves no doubt that we are about to see a tragic story in "House
of Sand and Fog."
Andre Dubus III's novel, was about a clash of cultures killing the American
dream of two equally guiltless parties. As adapted by the director and
Shawn Lawrence Otto, "House of Sand and Fog" stacks the deck more heavily
against Kathy who is played as if in a fog of her own by Jennifer Connelly.
While Connelly's character is indeed sympathetic, it is Ben Kingsley's
multi-layered rendering of the majestic former Iranian Air Force colonel
pitted against her who haunts the memory.
Kathy Nicolo (Jennifer Connelly, "The Hulk") is a depressed former addict
living in squalor in the coastal home left to her and her brother by her
father. The loud knocks of the sheriff's office rouse her to learn that
she must vacate her home because of nonpayment of business taxes, a
bureaucratic mixup she has little time to correct. Strike one against
Kathy - while she seemingly can still work in her ironic job as a
housekeeper, she allows herself to fall into such a stupor at home that she
lets the mail pile up beneath the slot it is dropped through. Kathy seeks
assistance from a public defender (a no nonsense Frances Fisher, "Blue
Car"), but before they're able to take action and sue the city, Kathy's
house has already been sold at auction.
Massoud Amir Behrani (Kingsley, "Sexy Beast") is a proud man struggling to
present the same affluent lifestyle he enjoyed in Iran to his expatriate
community in San Francisco. Behrani has accomplished wedding his daughter
to a wealthy Iranian and it is whispered that he works for Boeing at the
reception. In reality, Behrani works menial jobs, including an overnight
stint at a gas station. The auction of the Nicolo house is the beginning
of the rebuilding of his personal respectability.
Kathy's second strike comes when she allows the sympathy of married Deputy
Sheriff Lester Burdon (Ron Eldard, "Ghost Ship") to turn into something
else. They see Behrani as a foreigner looking to make a quick buck by
restoring her house, then selling it. Behrani sees them as prejudiced and
pampered Americans. Further complicating matters is the interplay between
Kathy and Behrani's wife Nadi (Shohreh Aghdashloo, "Maryam") and son
Esamail (newcomer Jonathan Ahdout) who do not initially understand her
connection to their new home and offer her only kindness.
The character of Burdon is a major problem. The man has no admirable
qualities, which reflects poorly on Kathy. He uses a beautiful young woman
in distress as an excuse to extricate himself from a marriage (wife Carol
is well played in two brief scenes by Kim Dickens) that only seems to have
grown too comfortable. The Deputy Sheriff, who should have a trained eye,
allows a professed former substance abuser to drink alcohol. He then uses
his badge and a fake name to threaten Behrani. Burdon is a necessary
element of the ever-escalating collision of wills, one just wishes he had
been more well thought out.
Connelly's portrayal of Kathy as a lost, wounded beauty is fine, but she is
outclassed by Kingsley, who admittedly has a more complexly written
character. While Connelly's Kathy spills her neediness out for all to see,
Kingsley's Behrani draws admiration for suffering in silence, actually
martyred for his macho pride. It is also Connelly's misfortune to always
appear glamorous and Perelman does nothing to downplay her beauty - taken
out to dinner by Lester, the homeless woman appears in a beautiful dress
and strappy heels. Kingsley runs through a gamut of emotions while rarely
dropping the outward facade that shields his standing in society. He is
desperate to become financially sound, frustrated by his uncomprehending
wife's demands and terrified by the haunting of the fragile beauty whose
misfortune is his gain. Kingsley also conveys a rich heritage and
spiritual beliefs that eventually break down his resistance to Kathy. His
Behrani is a good man forced into a corner who eventually turns the other
cheek. Another stunning performance is given by Shohreh Aghdashloo, who
gets to the heart of a woman utterly dependent on her husband as a stranger
in a foreign land. Aghdashloo shows the spoiled traits of a woman used to
moving in the upper classes, but her calm kindness is her real essence.
Eldard is saddled with a poorly conceived character, but makes him
believable nonetheless.
Cinematographer Roger Deakins ("A Beautiful Mind") and production designer
Maia Javan ("The Banger Sisters") succeed in making the house itself a
character. Deakins photographs it inside and out, from the details that
define a home to the landscape it is set within (the view from the house
ties it to the Behrani's former, more palatial home in Iran, and also gives
the modest home cache). The house is reflects its two owners with unshowy
set decoration, while maintaining its own identity. A cherished Iranian
metalwork coffee table is used to symbolically illustrate the cultural
clash between Kathy and the Colonel. James Horner ("Titanic") delivers
another nice score after his work on "The Missing," a mournful
accompaniment to this unrelenting tragedy.
Russian born Perelman has given his film's perspective more fully to the
foreigner in the land of opportunity, but the universal desire for land
ownership has never been more lamentably depicted.
B+
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X-RT-RatingText: B+
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