Movie Review: Frailty

Not hard to see why Bill Paxton's singular psychological horror movie, Frailty (2002), is in the DVD cut-out bins less than five years after it was initially released: it is not the kind of horror movie that lets viewers off easily. Grimly oppressive and surprisingly sure-handed for first-time director Paxton, the movie is a grueling look at religious mania, murder and psychological battering largely told from the point of view of a pre-teen boy (Matt O’Leary). It's about as far removed from your average teen-marketed slice-and-dice horror outing as you can get — with much more of a lingering aftertaste. Definitely not the type of scary movie you'd wanna use as a date flick.

The movie centers around a Texas family in the late 70's, the Meiks (them what'll inherit the Earth?): a single parent family led by widower Dad (Paxton). As told in the present day by one of his two sons (Matthew McConaughey) to a hard-bitten F.B.I. agent (Powers Boothe), Dad (we're never given a first name) is a mechanic who has a revelation while at work one day. The Voice of God has spoken to him, telling him that there are demons walking the world and that it's his family's job to destroy them. "So we're like superheroes?" asks younger son Adam (Jeremy Sumpter), who immediately wants to know what powers the Lord will confer on 'em.

Older son Fenton has his doubts about Dad’s vision. "Maybe you just dreamed it," he says. "Maybe, maybe, you're not right in the head." But he's unable to sway the old man from his new righteous path. Armed with his "magical weapons" – an old ax, a lead pipe and two work gloves – and holding onto a list of names, he takes the two boys out with him as he tracks down names from his list, "destroys" them (it's not murder, he reassures both kids, since the victims are not really human) and buries the bodies in the towns public rose garden. (Among the victims: a young Cynthia Ettinger from Carnivále and Deadwood.) When Fenton starts to buck against his father, he's locked in a cellar for a week without food and only a single serving of water per day.

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Article Author: Bill Sherman

Bill Sherman is a Books editor for Blogcritics. With his lovely wife Rebecca Fox, he has recently co-authored a sudsy comic fat acceptance novel entitled Measure By Measure.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Katie McNeill

    Oct 01, 2006 at 1:27 pm

    I loved this movie, it wasn't what you expected and it scared you. I thought it was great. Not a favorite, but still great.

  • 2 - Triniman

    Oct 01, 2006 at 4:09 pm

    This is a pretty good film. Not a big money maker, but I heard about from word of mouth long after it came out and bought the dvd.

  • 3 - Walter Raab

    Oct 01, 2006 at 9:40 pm

    Great review! Sometimes the most unlikely actor impresses, as did Steve Buscemi with Trees Lounge. Cheers!

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