It’s a cliché that good things come in small packages.
But sometimes, clichés are true. In the case of the four films featured on this month’s Saturday Night at the Movies, presented by the REEL Recovery Film Festival in association with In The Rooms, great things come in short packages.
A good short film, like a good short story, weaves elements of character, plot, entertainment, and, in the case of the following four films, message into the rich and vibrant tapestry of the filmmaker’s vision. Each film is about an aspect of addiction, self-abuse and/or alcoholism. The story and filmmaker’s approach to the subject is addressed in different ways and from disparate points of view. But as they say in AA, “we look for the similarities…not the differences.”
I Love Ana
I Love Ana is a unique portrait of a young woman struggling with her relationship to food, her body and self-image. Lead character “Mars” is a high-school student and dancer who compares her self and body to other seemingly thinner girls in her class. That mental journey into despair begins her journey into the dysfunctional world on “Ana” and “Mia” chat rooms. Ana and Mia, short for anorexia and bulimia, offer support and tips to more effectively practice those disordered eating behaviors. Writer/director Alyssa G. Mullings drew on her own struggles with body image, anorexia and her experience with online chat rooms as the impetus for her film.
Destination
In Destination, Wilson, a heroin addict going through withdrawal, can “get well” if he delivers a package to an address programmed into his navigation app. Sounds simple, but the navigation app (called G.O.D.) has ideas of its own. Newcomers to AA or NA often hear God, used as an acronym, i.e. Good Orderly Direction, ostensibly to ease them into accepting a spiritual solution. The film follows Wilson as he desperately tries to find the right address, each mistake leading him further away from getting high, but closer to the Truth. Is it odd or is it GOD? Destination is directed by Jason Spagnuoli.
Stay
Stay is a love story. Alex is an exuberant young newcomer to AA, high on not being high. Jack, despite long-term sobriety, is bitter, angry and resentful. Alex’s sponsor sends him to be of service and help Jack pack for a cross-country trip. Jack does his best to smash any enthusiasm Alex has for meetings, sobriety, fellowship or his future by relating all the terrible things he has gone through while being sober. Jack and Alex look like the classic Odd Couple, destined to finally see the best in each other and fall in love. In the end they do fall in love – with AA, sobriety and themselves. Directed by Chris Phillips.
Age of Dysphoria
Age of Dysphoria is a complex drama about the difference between making amends and making things right. In Jessica Pettelle’s film, newly sober Finley starts her 9th step by confronting the man, Fred, who’s car she hit in a blackout, killing his wife. Fred, who has Alzheimers, believes her to be his late wife, Stella. This gives Finley the opportunity to make amends for her behavior, and gives Fred the chance to make up for his, too. Fred, we find out, was a jerk, who had ruined all of his relationships. There is plenty of guilt to go around as both Finley and Fred believe they are responsible for Stella’s death. A unique friendship is formed, courtesy of Alcoholics Anonymous.
These four shorts exemplify storytelling at its finest. Honest, uncomfortable, funny and sad they show the best and worst of human nature and particularly the toll addiction, alcoholism and battered self-worth take on a person and their families. These films don’t have tidy endings, that is what makes them real but they leave the viewer with a sense of hope. I Love Ana, Destination, Stay and Age of Dysphoria show how through inner strength, G.O.D, love and service and friendship we can and do recover.
Watch the Four Shorts on Saturday Night
Join us this Saturday, December 12 at 9 PM Eastern for this free film screening! All you need is a free In The Rooms account to view the films. Simply sign up to become a member, then enter the virtual movie theatre.
1 Comment
I love hearing the things said whenever I get this in my emails. For some reason it makes me think about a person that I knew and liked. The person I’m relating to was a real alcoholic like me and this person was sent to treatment and really looked good with the glow that comes back after months of not drinking gaining weight back and looking well. The same person got back on the booze again and was about forty pounds lighter with the yellow color on her face. I asked this person what happened and made a reference to her as an Ethiopian. I do feel that I should have used a better choice of words. This person really reacted hard to what I said and became very angry. I was trying to have this person look at herself but didn’t mean to cause that bad of a reaction. I remember what I looked like when I got sober and was just trying to make this person look at herself. Months later this person died from alcoholism and I told was even worse looking than when I seen her last. I find myself asking this to myself could I have said it differently? Was I too honest? I didn’t tell this person what they wanted to hear. I felt that this person needed to hear that. These types of things make me stick to staying clean and sober as my health got bad from drugs and alcohol but I wasn’t that far progressed as that person but I’ve been told that the bottom I hit didn’t need to be the same as others bottoms. I’ve sponsored people and they all so far have went back to the old ways and didn’t stay clean and sober but I stayed sober. One of my sponsors said to me once if you find the perfect excuse for going back out there come and tell me because he might want to use it. The way I look at it today is relapse isn’t an alternative. JFB