|
|
COMMUNITY RATING




Marc has had a rough life. Adopted as an infant, he was held back in pre-school (putting him in
the same grade as his younger brother), failed to graduate high school, and suffered a head
injury at twenty-one. His entire worldview was that he was cheated by life. Then he discovered
he is the grandson of Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth.
Unlike Marc, his sister Kim’s life always seemed to be easy. She was the first child born to her
attractive parents, into an extended family of tall Montana farmers. She was high school class
president and valedictorian, voted most likely to succeed. She was also captain of the football
team — you see, Kim used to be Marc’s younger brother. Having these two siblings in the same
grade in a small Montana town made for a perfect storm of brotherly rivalry.
Twenty years later Marc and Kim return home to their small Montana hometown, a
springboard that hurtles Prodigal Sons into a year in the life of this Montana family, forcing
them to face challenges no one could imagine. Seen through the eyes of Kim, the filmmaker, she
is the most surprised of all as she discovers her brother Marc is still trapped in the brotherly
rivalry she long ago abandoned. She sets out to unravel this complex history, and learns it is
she who needs to resolve bygone days by confronting the ghost of her male past. Her rare
access delicately reveals both family’s most private moments and an epic vista, as the film
travels from Montana to Croatia, from high school reunion to jail cell, and from deaths and
births to commitments of all kinds.
Marc and Kim’s relationship is an ideal polarizing test case for the universal issues every
family confronts: sibling rivalry, gender, nature versus nurture, and the question of whether
anyone can reinvent oneself. Their bond, which defies both Kim’s gender and Marc’s pedigree,
exists as the fascinating heart of the film, and is orbited by a colorful, articulate cast of
characters, including jailhouse chaplains, Montana farmers, intrigued high school classmates,
and Orson Welles’ soul-mate Oja Kodar, among others. Carol, the remarkably resilient mother
who accepts her children’s surprises with grace and optimism, provides a strong backbone for
the family, as well as a clear-eyed entry-point to this drama of Wellesian proportions. All along
the way surprising revelations abound: Marc’s innate savant ability to play the piano, Kim’s
smooth acceptance from schoolmates and community, and their younger brother Todd’s welladjusted
attitude about being gay.
In the end, we see that transformation happens when least expected. After pulling for this
family through its trials and tribulations, we learn that a poignant sense of hope will carry
them through.
Got an opinion or a scoop ? Have info on a film production shooting in your neck of the woods? Read a draft of the script ? Or want to comment on potential casting ? IONCINEMA.com's Water Cooler Topics is an area where you can discuss, contribute and share among your cinephile peers.