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the washington post
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friday, march 13, 2020
ers. But he was so contrarian
that when his publisher asked
for a sequel to his 1984 bestsell-
er “miami Blues” — made into a
1990 film starring Alec Baldwin
and fred Ward — he delivered a
manuscript that turned his
hero moseley into such a mon-
ster that it was never published.
Adapting “Heresy” — its un-
usual title comes from one of
Debney’s paintings — screen-
writer Smith relocates the ac-
tion of Willeford’s novel from
seedy South florida to pictur-
esque Italy, which softens the
hard-boiled cynicism of the
original. And yet the movie has
a way of sneaking up on you,
and its radical deviations from
Willeford’s narrative keep the
convoluted plot fresh, even if
you know the book.
It’s really the cast who help
deliver that plot. Bang has a
voice that recalls a young James
mason at times: Just listen to
him entice Berenice to a fancy
orange from 29 art party because, as he puts it,
“there just might be some cu-
cumber sandwiches.” He’s got a
perfect foil in Debicki. Berenice
sees through James’s smug in-
tellect, cutting him down to size
with a mix of blunt candor and
smart-alecky banter.
But the film’s biggest plea-
sure comes courtesy of a hilari-
ously hammy Jagger, who deliv-
ers such gems of art-speak as
“modigliani provenance” with a
gleefully upper-class air. It’s l ike
showing up for a gallery talk
and finding out that the rolling
Stones are your guide.
Like James, “The Burnt or-
ange Heresy” asks whether the
story behind a work of art is
more important than the work
itself. And that may or may not
be so. But thanks to small doses
of sex and violence — and a
healthy dollop of Jagger — the
movie that frames that question
is more entertaining than any-
thing any critic, including this
one, might say.
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Movies
ents (played by Gary Sinise and
pop-country diva Shania Twain)
scrimp to buy him a guitar before
he heads t o Southern California to
attend an evangelical Protestant
college. The school may be as
congenial as depicted in this mov-
ie, but its actual campus is in
reality a lot farther from the beach
than the swooping drone shots
suggest.
Camp makes canny use of the
new instrument, soon endearing
himself to earnest, pretty melissa
as well as a successful Christian
rocker, Jean-Luc (Nathan Par-
sons). The latter enthusiastically
furthers Jeremy’s musical career,
a sponsorship rendered a little
awkward by the fact that both
guys a re smitten with melissa. She
tries to navigate a safe path be-
tween the two men’s f eelings until
she’s compelled to choose Jeremy
by some urgent news: a diagnosis
of ovarian cancer.
There’s l ots of praying, whether
on stage or in hospital rooms, for
melissa’s recovery. As a dramatic
device, however, the possibility of
remission doesn’t pack much
power. It’s evident that Jeremy
and the other characters would
I Still Believe
A Christian soft-rocker faces a faith crisis in slickly sweet drama
BY MARK JENKINS
The spiritual crisis in “I Still
Believe” takes about two of the
movie’s dawdling 115 minutes.
Bristling with grief, Christian
soft-rocker Jeremy Camp (KJ
Apa) does a Pete To wnshend on
his acoustic guitar. But he quickly
regains control and realizes that
he — you guessed it — still be-
lieves.
Based on the real-life Camp’s
memoir of the same name, “I Still
Believe” recounts the singer’s
whirlwind college romance with
melissa Henning (Britt robert-
son), who succumbed to cancer
shortly after the couple married.
A sort of “me, God and the Dying
Girl,” the movie is well-made (if
slow) and features an attractive
cast and a lot of amiable (if bland)
religious pop-rock.
What it lacks is any serious
wrangling with the theological is-
sues raised by the seemingly ran-
dom death of an innocent young
person. A certain kind of believer
will probably accept the movie’s
acceptance. But skeptics and ad-
herents of other creeds — includ-
ing some varieties of Christianity
— will probably be unmoved.
Jeremy is introduced as an ear-
nest, handsome and musically
gifted kid from a financially
strapped Indiana family. His par-
draw the same message from her
death as from her deliverance.
“I Still Believe” was directed by
the filmmakers known as the Er-
win Brothers: Jon, who also
worked on the script, and Andrew
Erwin. They previously made “I
Can only Imagine,” a 2018 musi-
cal biopic based on the mercyme
tune of the same title, reportedly
the most played Christian rock
song ever. The siblings have ap-
parently found their niche.
No longer the devil’s music de-
nounced by some Christians a
half-century ago, the rock songs of
these movies are yearning but
musically easygoing. They are, as
Jean-Luc says with one eye on
melissa, “love songs to God —
mostly to God.”
Apa (“riverdale’s” Archie) per-
forms Camp’s compositions in a
pleasant tenor that’s lighter than
the voice of their original singer.
As he strums, the folkie ballads
are sometimes swelled by an un-
seen string section or an invisible
choir. The effect of the disembod-
ied accompaniment isn’t particu-
larly eerie. It just makes the songs
a little more like the movie itself:
slick and sweet.
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michael Kubeisy/lionsgate
Melissa (Britt robertson) and Jeremy (KJ apa) in “I Still Believe,” based on Christian soft-rocker
Jeremy Camp’s memoir of the same title that recounts the singer’s whirlwind college romance.
PG. at area theaters. contains
upsetting medical developments.
115 minutes.
In the raunchy comedy “Big Time adolescence,”
SNL’s Pete D avidson p lays a charming young-adult lout
who hangs out with a teenager (Griffin Gluck). Accord-
ing to Variety, the film i sn’t b ad, “but it’s a t rifle.” R. At t he
Angelika Pop-Up at Union Market and the ArcLight
Bethesda. Contains drug and alcohol use, pervasive
crude language and sexual references, all involving
teens. 9 1 minutes.
A remake of the 2011 Belgian road-trip comedy
“Hasta la Vista” — itself based on a true story —
“Come as You are” tells the story of three young
men with disabilities on a mission to lose their
virginity. “ It’s n ot the m ost subtle disability c omedy
you’ve seen, n or is it at a ll c oncerned with exploring
the ethical issues surrounding sex work,” according
to the Hollywood reporter. “But its lightness is a
virtue in the film’s rare sentimental moments,
which might’ve been too corny to bear in other
contexts.” Unrated. At the Cinema Arts Theatre.
Contains some disturbing violent content and ter-
ror. 106 minutes.
Also Opening
samuel goldwyn Films
From left, ravi Patel, Hayden Szeto, grant rosenmeyer and gabourey Sidibe in “Come as You are,” a
story of three young men with disabilities on a mission to lose their virginity.
R. at landmark’s e street cinema and the angelika Film center
mosaic. contains sexuality, nudity, strong language, drug use and
violence. 99 minutes.
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