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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
The Heart Is Deceitful Above
All Things (Asia Argento)
Honesty may be the best policy, but when viewing
the brutal reality of The Heart Is Deceitful
Above All Things, and knowing the story to
be true, the tears at the heart and tears in the
eyes make this film a beautifully, painful watch.
I really struggled with this review more than
any other because of the conflict between the
captivating nature of cinematography and the honest,
bare bone presentation by the film’s actors,
and how one is left asking, “What the hell?”
as the film ends by dropping off a cliff.
The story is of J.T. Leroy (the ‘J’
stands for Jeremiah and the ‘T’ for
Terminator, an ironic nickname he acquired while
hustling the streets) and his horrible, abusive
childhood. He was born in 1980 to a young, teenage
rebel of a girl named Sarah (Asia Argento), and
up until he was seven, he lived a fairly normal
childhood under the protection of his foster parents.
To emphasize the utter failure that is our country’s
child welfare system, which governs foster homes
and the half a million or so children where they
reside, J.T is taken from the home where his foster
parents wanted to adopt him, and against his will,
is thrown back into the life of his then 23-year
old alcoholic, drug addict, prostitute of a mother.
Good call.
Derived from Leroy’s book of the same name,
which was published when he was only 21 (Leroy
had already published articles in Nerve, The New
York Press, and Spin at the age of 16, along with
his first novel in 2000 called “Sarah”),
chronicles the years of chaos as his transient
parent Sarah took him from truck stop hustling,
living with boyfriends/pseudo father figures that
raped and beat him, to episodes where Sarah shared
drugs with her son and mentally manipulated him
into submission. Numerous times Leroy ends up
in the hospital, including one of the first scarring
incidents that brought him to live with his evangelical
grandparents for three years while his mom lived
her rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle. But Sarah
would always come back for what seemed to be the
only anchor she had in life, her son.
Asia Argento, who directed the film while playing
the psychotic mother role, did an amazing job
at molding the scenes and conducting the orchestration
of actors, including Jimmy Bennet who does a stunning
job as 7 year old Jeremiah; Cole and Dylan Sprouse
who are Jeremiah at age 10 (Ross’ son in
Friends); Michael Pitt (Hedwig & The Angry
Inch), who plays a mentally challenged friend
of one of her meth-lab boyfriends Chester, played
by Jeremy Sisto (Six Feet Under). Other appearances
include Peter Fonda as the grandfather, Marilyn
Manson as another boyfriend, Jackson, Lydia Lunch
as one of the social workers, and a good friend
of the real J.T., Winona Ryder, who plays an inept
psychologist.
Tim Armstrong (Rancid, Transplants), who also
has a role as Stinky, worked with Argento on the
soundtrack on the film, which definitely reflected
the era of ‘80s punk and rock ‘n’
roll.
But without knowing the background of the book
and its lead character, the film, which only takes
you to Jeremiah’s age of ten, leaves many
loose ends. If this is a true story, what happened
next? How did he survive? How did he get to be
a published author at such a young age? How did
he get to know enough of the right people to get
his book into film?
Strip any of that knowing away, and you’re
left with a very brutal, cringing film that leaves
all those questions hanging. Life can be pretty
ugly, and film is one art form that can definitely
get across that message. So it can go either way.
As a fan of J.T. Leroy and his writings, and of
cinematic creations, this can be a very captivating,
albiet shocking, experience. Or it can just leave
you angry and haunted by the visuals that won’t
leave your mind, knowing that what J.T. experienced
is happening right now to God knows how many children.
The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things opens
Friday, May 26 at Starz Film Center.
www.heartisdeceitful.com/
-Kim Owens, May 23, 2006
Click
here to read the review of I Am A Sex Addict,
which also opens Friday, May 26 at Starz Film
Center.
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