THE SENSATION OF SIGHT
is an offbeat drama about the search for meaning in a world of whys.
Finn (David Straithairn), an introspective English teacher, is suffering
through a crisis of guilt triggered by the suicide of one of his
students. Having voluntarily exiled himself from family and career to
"work things out," he's currently living on the streets. Day after day,
he drags a wagon through his small town selling encyclopedias to the
town locals, each of whom is suffering his or her own crisis, each
connected to another character in a way not immediately apparent to us.
The film is a mesmerizing, funny, moving, frightening and exhilarating.
But be forewarned, you must be willing to take the time to let it draw
you in – it’s a jigsaw puzzle, and it takes awhile to see the whole
picture. Straithairn, one of our finest and most versatile American
actors, gives a remarkable performance. Every conceivable emotion,
thought, confusion, amusement, and pain registers in his worn face. His
story is the focus of the film, but around him is a marvelous, amusing,
touching gallery of characters and performances – male and female, old,
young, children, even a sad, mute ghost who, like the living characters
he follows around, carry a burden that only Finn’s direct or peripheral
assistance can help lighten as he struggles to heal his own withered
soul.
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