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eFilm
Critic: 5 stars, Awesome!
Reviewed by Erik Childress of the Chicago Film
Society
"Any Signal Sabrina Lloyd Gives You - Act
On It!" 5
Stars (Awesome)
SCREENED AT THE 2008 PHILADELPHIA
FILM FESTIVAL: A
few movies over the years have attempted to give audiences
the disorientation that comes with being blind. Most
famously used in the theatrical and cinematic experience
of Wait Until Dark, the blueprint for creating
a sequence that masks its viewers in utter blackness
while the
movie continues.
Normally it evolves during the course of a horror story
to grasp us in the natural fear that arrives with the
sudden realization
that we’re unable to know when our sight will
return. (Spielberg’s Night
Gallery episode famously used it as the ironic
punchline.) Filmmakers use it to see how far they can
clock it before
audiences become impatient or snicker-happy. Anything
more than a few
minutes and you don’t have a movie, you have
a hearing test. So here comes Ana Calamia, jumping
into
the fray
with her
first picture and experimenting with the medium of
another impairment. The characters of Universal
Signs may have
trouble seeing
what’s right in front of them from time-to-time,
but Andrew is unable to hear as well and this embracing
story is told entirely
through his ears.
Andrew’s (Anthony Natale) journey
is indeed told through the perspective of a deaf man.
No ambient noises.
Dialogue is either filtered through sign language or
the closed captioning made available for us sign-impaired.
The only time Andrew apparently
can hear sound is within his own dreams and aside from
that the only collinear tonality comes from the harmonies
of Joe Renzetti’s
constant score. As a supervisor at work, Andrew’s
no-nonsense demands of work-now/talk-later usually draw
him scorn and mocking
with hidden lips. This particular morning with a missing
wallet has hardly brightened his mood but he soon gets
into a friendly tech support
exchange by e-mail with the college’s new librarian,
Mary. When they meet face-to-face, Andrew is not only
lucky enough to
see that she resembles Sabrina Lloyd but that her own
family has some deaf history and she’s pretty fluent
in signing. So what if she occasionally mixes up “beer” with “bitch?” Andrew
and Mary have another chance encounter and strike up
an obvious attraction to one another. Their first
evening together doesn’t go quite as smoothly
and Andrew continues to be haunted by the nightmares
of a previous relationship with obvious
tragic implications. After a brief bout at trying to
keep Mary at a distance, he eventually opens his eyes
to more than just the
obvious
perfections of her personality and communication skills
and the pair begin a romance built upon the foundations
of faith and forgiveness.
Two words like
that may be scary enough to viewers worried that
they’re
about to be bombarded with some Mitch Albom/Nicholas
Sparks gobbelygook. But while there is certainly
an undercurrent involving Mary’s Sunday
morning habits, it’s
just one of the many naturalistic and unobtrusive
aspects of the film that manages to avoid its
potential gimmick trappings. Once you
accept
the
manner in which Calamia tells her story, our immersion
into it becomes so seamless that you may catch yourself
occasionally ignoring the
subtitles laid out for us and trying to directly
read the lips of the characters. There’s also something
magical that occurs without calling obvious attention
to itself when Universal Signs actually gets around to embracing its roots in the
history of silent film. Developments in the plotting may give you the
occasional
eye roll
for either their contrivance. But when you discover
the big reveal during an Easter dinner scene, those versed in the
schools
of Chaplin or clavical-themed westerns will recognize
the subtle shift in Renzetti’s
score and provide new light on the direct convenience
of an early antagonist and the second one it spawns.
It’s not a far trip to imagine
this dinner sequence with full title cards and speeded-up
film in a full-on homage to the beginnings of motion
pictures before we could all hear Al Jolson.
Universal Signs, more than
most films obviously, depends on a pair of actors to make us believe
in
a world where
words and volume can not be used as crutches for
selling a performance or an emotion. Anthony Natale is a deaf actor
that
you
may remember as Richard Dreyfuss’ grown-up
son in Mr. Holland’s Opus
or the romantic in the elevator who inspired Jerry
Maguire’s
penultimate declaration of love. Here is does a
marvelous job creating sympathy for his haunted
past and never overplaying his
cautious distance from Mary. There’s love.
Here is does a marvelous job creating sympathy
for his haunted past and never overplaying his
cautious distance from Mary. There’s the
risk of being such a sourpuss that we find ourselves
falling in with the co-workers ready
to pull a Seinfeld
trick the minute his eyes can’t meet our
lips. But Calamia and Natale balance Andrew’s
pain with not so much a slow thaw, but a more human
recognition that love does indeed begin with being
able to say you’re
sorry.
Calamia and Natale also couldn’t
have found a better partner for Andrew than Sabrina
Lloyd. Years ago after
seeing the little indie, Dopamine, at the 2003
Sundance Film Festival I remember telling people that the way director
Mark
Decena
framed her in some of those
scene, Sabrina would be right at home as a silent
film actress. Not because she had to over-sell
grandiose emotions in some reverse Kuleshov Effect
method but because her eyes and smile had the
ability to tell a story all by
themselves. Anyone who fancied her work as the
sunny assistant on Sports Night knows she can
sell the dialogue but in Universal Signs,
she doesn’t
miss a beat without it making it just as easy
to fall for her the way we usually do for any
cool, smart, funny girl that manifests
in a
Garden State, Juno or Once. This is precisely
the kind of role that Sabrina Lloyd should be
getting more of and it was great to
see that
same magic from Dopamine again.
(While unintentional
I’m sure, there is a sort
of bemused Dopamine swap going on with Lloyd’s
character in Universal Signs. This time it
was the guy that was damaged with memories
of a “lost” person
from his past, which he then loses himself
in painting while Lloyd’s Mary hunts
down his past on the internet and prints up
pages
for him to see. Apples and oranges
and never
a distraction,
but I can’t also be the only one to appreciate
the link of Margot Kidder playing Lloyd’s
mom while twin sisters are running around the
house.)
The underlying themes of communication
never overburden the central connection we’re
making along with Andrew and Mary. There’s
subtlety in the pair of apologetic e-mails
that are never sent, thus emphasizing society’s
overreliance on mechanization over human
contact. Calamia’s affection for both
Modern Times and City Lights wisely become
wedged in instead of inviting a direct and
unfair comparison. The closing moments where
the instrumental is finally
joined by
lyrics is a beautiful
touch (with just the right song) in encapsulating
Andrew and Mary’s
romance and a perfect reminder that a well-timed
word, whether spoken or unspoken can be all
you need to fall in love. Just as you are
likely to be by the end of
Universal Signs.
©
Copyright HBS Entertainment, Inc.
Philadelphia
Film Festival Review
Reviewed by Walter Kealey
of the Philadelphia Film Society Ann Calamia's attention-grabbing drama tells the tale
of a deaf man struggling to communicate with those around him as he grapples
with the past and looks for love.
Through a unique combination of music and subtitles, Ann
Calamia delivers a cinematic experience unlike anything you've ever seen.
The film's tagline, "Captioned for the Hearing," doesn't even begin to
describe what the viewer is in store for. Andrew, a young computer tech
worker, is trying to break out of a menial, day-to-day boredom of his
job. He is deaf, and to express his way of perceiving the world, the
film forces the viewer to experience the life as Andrew does: without
the ability to hear anyone or anything in the film. Through his relationship
with Mary, a coworker who knows sign language, he begins to move forward
in life. This relationship, however, also forces him to deal with painful
issues from his past that he will need to overcome before he can love
again. The greatest strength in the film lies in its ability to present
a classic story in an innovative and interesting way. Universal Signs will leave you with a warm feeling while also making you think twice
about the way you communicate with those around.
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