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"Family is the one thing the government or a bill collector can not come
in and take from you."
Shot over a year from one Halloween to the next leading in to the family
Halloween party, "October Country" is a documentary based not around
monsters or demons or the undead, but around a family living in the
shadows of their past. We visit the Mosher family, a small rather
disconnected group of people all haunted by ghosts of war, and by their
endless slew of bad decisions that have led them down a road of pain,
misery, scars, and distorted memories keeping them in a state of
ignorance and sadness that carries on from one generation to the next,
all of whom hopelessly indoctrinated by cigarettes.. A
dad still scarred by the memories of war, a mom whose wisdom often falls
on deaf ears, a young daughter Daneal who prefers to live in a state of
sheer denial that her father who was a violent and abusive man was
really gentle constantly going in and out of abusive relationships and
forced to give up her newborn daughter, another daughter forced to live
in her own fantasy world, and the youngest child who does nothing but
laugh at life and displays some keen observations about her family and
her life. "October Country" is a miserable and often bleak documentary
that is so focused on a family who, even in their brightest moments, are
sill so utterly miserable living on lies and dysfunction, all of whom
have so much to say about one another and prefer just to let some things
remain unsaid. The primary theme of the film is the constant snake
eating its own tail as every single family member are stuck in a rut
after making one terrible decision and the potential for the youngest
daughter to head down the very path of resentment and hatred that will
possibly lead her in to her mom's life of abuse, misery, and unwanted
children she's convinced herself she must have to achieve some
unreachable goal of the perfect family.
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The two most fascinating
individuals of the family is Denise a young woman so
entrenched in pain and suffering she hides in her small
house painted with fantasy and witchcraft characters and is
so fascinated with death that she seeks solace in unseen
spirits in local cemeteries hoping to speak with ghosts or
apparitions and likely seeking some form of peace of mind
that there is an after life and possible reward for this
continuous suffering. |
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And
there's Desi, a little girl so woefully filled with bliss and optimism
that she's much more aware of her family's faults that even they are.
She is a girl who is on the surface oblivious to what's occurring around
her, but when put in front of a camera elicits such pearls of wisdom and
insight that it's absolutely shocking--and yet she doesn't really want
the full extent of what her education has to offer, especially in the
growing state of hatred for her family. One of the most frustrating
aspects of the documentary is matriarch Dottie's insistence in believing
in the goodness in people, and this leads her down a horrible path as
she struggles to cling to her relationship with foster child Chris, a
reckless and lecherous young man who hurts the family over and over but
relies on the fact that Dottie refuses to abandon him. Directors Michael
Palmieri and Donal Mosher never once manipulate or intervene in any of
the situations that occur on screen and allow the family to naturally
motivate one another in to confronting their own issues and explaining
to the audience that these people are all doomed to be in a perpetual
ring of misery and sadness until they confront their pasts and anger.
And this will likely never happen. Thus, they're infinitely doomed, and
that's what makes "October Country" such a bleak and harrowing
documentary.
Sometimes ghosts don't have to come from the grave to haunt someone, and
"October Country" is the picture of a family eternally haunted and
destroyed by their past scarred, wounded, and torn down by an relentless
chain of resentment, hatred, disgust, and misery that lingers over them
like a specter, and it's truly one of the most compelling films I've
ever seen, barnone.
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