ROOM was a brilliant film that has stuck with me since I saw
it Sunday. Everything works: the cinematography, the nuanced performances, the
lighting, the stark contrast between the first half of the film and the second.
It is a tough and brutal story, about a seventeen year old girl who is
kidnapped and held captive in what is essentially a sound-proofed garden shed
for seven years. She is raped every night by her captor. Two years in, she has
given birth to Jack, whose fifth birthday opens the film. And it is quickly
becoming apparent to Ma, which is what Jack calls her, although her real name
is Joy, that if they do not manage to escape soon, their captor, referred to
only as ‘him’ or ‘Old Nick’ will try to kill them. Or at least Ma. As with the
book (which I am only now reading), the POV is through Jack’s eyes. Room is his
only normal. It is not a prison to him, it is simply his life. And then he
manages to help save them, a piece of the plot I won’t give away, although you
do see a piece of it in all the trailers.
If you have been
afraid to go see it, go anyway. I will probably see it at least one more time.
It inspired me to check the book out of the library and I can say that the film
stays very true to the text.
I had not wanted to read the book. I’m not fully sure why
except to say that I thought –falsely so—that it would be sensationalistic or
lurid or whatever. It is none of those things, although clearly there are
larger agendas in the actual text that reach beyond the story of this one
mother and son. I am glad that I am reading it now and I’m honestly blown away
by Emma Donoghue’s prose, by her narrative choices, her ability to use a five
year old to tell this story in a way that makes sense and is in fact, the best
way to show the world that Ma has created for him in one 12x12 room that seems
to Jack a much larger place. His narration allows the reality of Ma’s horror to
wash over use between the lines and it is all the more horrific because of
that. Her true situation in contrast to the world that she has created for
Jack. And the film (Donoghue wrote the screenplay as well) manages to capture
all this as well, also through Jack’s eyes. Including freedom in the 2nd
half, because Room is the only world Jack has known and so freedom means
something very different to him than it does to Ma.
I’m going to be thinking about this story for a long time,
about motherhood and childhood, and the awful things people do to each other
and the human spirit that allows us to survive. About how generally impossible
it is for us to understand situations we haven’t physically experienced. About
this story of a woman and her child forced to make their own world.
Go see ROOM. Then let me know what you thought.
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