I, (Bride/Groom), take you (Groom/Bride), to be my
(wife/husband), to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for
worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to
cherish; from this day forward until death do us part.
For better or worse.. .That
is what husband and wives pledge to each other when they take their vows. But
how many of them actually think about and prepare for the worst? In writer,
director’s Ava DuVernay’s film, middle of
no where, it is the worse part of the marriage vows that Ruby finds herself
facing.
When we meet Ruby, she is
on the way to visit her husband who is incarcerated for the possession and sale
of guns and is doing an 8 year bid. Ruby, a nurse, who has dreams of medical
school puts her dream on hold to be the dutiful wife. It would be too hard to
be in medical school and still visit Derek on the weekends and she doesn’t want
to not be able to take his calls she rationalizes much to the dismay of both
her mother and her sister.
Derek tries to get Ruby
to go on with her life, but she refuses. She tells him that she’ll be there for
him. Ruby keeps abreast of everything that’s happening with Derek. She reads
through his file. She stays in contact with the attorney. She visits him every
weekend and waits patiently by the phone for his calls. They can do this, she
tells him. She has high hopes for an early release date.
But when she shows up at
his hearing, new information sends her into a tailspin and she lands in the
arms of, Brian, a bus driver on whose
route she rides every day. Ruby reluctantly agrees to go out with Brian, but
she doesn’t tell him the whole story behind the wedding ring on her finger. She
only says that she and her husband are separated.
Like Ruby, Brian is also
wounded. He is separated from his wife, and doesn’t see any signs of reconciliation.
So, he pursues not knowing her circumstances. Ruby struggles to make sense of life,
but she stumbles to find her Truth—whatever it might be. She can’t seem to
escape her past, and she has no idea what the future holds and she finds
herself frozen with no idea how to break free of a life that’s holding her
hostage.
This taut, slowly
dripping across the screen like molasses film, deals with the nuances of everyday life. It’s
not about good guys and bad guys or even happy endings. It is a film of culpability and vulnerability.
It is about the messiness of life; and that in the midst of that messiness,
life marches on.
Great obersevation!
ReplyDeleteOk, I'm sucked in. Tell me where to download the rest of the film! LOL. Very nicely written. What a way to spark my interest!
ReplyDeleteI love books and movies, I didn't know anything about this film. You have peeked my interest. Now I want to see the film and/or read the book. The article was nicely written. You didn't tell too much, yet just enough. Thank you!
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