At Play in the Fields of the Lord

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

At Play in the Fields of the Lord

Theatrical Poster
Directed by Hector Babenco
Produced by Executive Producer:
David Nichols
Producer:
Saul Zaentz
Written by Hector Babenco
Jean-Claude Carrière
Vincent Patrick
Story:
Peter Matthiessen
Starring Tom Berenger
Aidan Quinn
Kathy Bates
Daryl Hannah
John Lithgow
Tom Waits
Music by Zbigniew Preisner
Cinematography Lauro Escorel
Editing by William M. Anderson
Armen Minasian
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) December 6, 1991
Running time 189 minutes
Country United States
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

At Play in the Fields of the Lord is a 1991 drama film directed by Hector Babenco.[1]

The screenplay was writen by Babenco and Jean-Claude Carrière, and based on the novel by Peter Matthiessen.

It stars Tom Berenger, Aidan Quinn, Kathy Bates, Daryl Hannah, John Lithgow and Tom Waits.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The films tells of Americans Lewis Moon (Tom Berenger) and Wolf (Tom Waits) who, when their plane runs out of gas, are stranded in Mae de Deus an outpost in the deep Brazilian Amazon River basin.

Living in the village are evangelist missionary Leslie Huben (John Lithgow) and his wife Andy Huben (Darryl Hannah); and Martin Quarier(Aidan Quinn), his wife Hazel (Kathy Bates)) and their small son, who have just arrived from the United States.

The minister and the Quarrier's want to spread the Christian gospel to the primitive Niaruna indigenous natives, the others have more nefarious interests, to wit: business concerns that would lay claim to the Niaruna's land for business development.

The local police chief cuts a deal with mercenaries Lewis and Wolf: if they bomb the Niarunas and eliminated them, they will be paid enough money to leave Brazil.

Instead, Lewis, a half Native American Cheyenne, aligns himself with the Niarunas. From this moment on, both are in trouble.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Background

Producer Saul Zaentz first tried to make this film in 1965. Yet, he discovered that MGM owned the rights to Peter Matthiessen's novel.

Zaentz kept trying to buy them every time there was an top executive change at MGM until 1989 when the new studio heads Jay Kanter and Alan Ladd, Jr. decided that MGM would not make the film.

Zaentz paid $1.4 million for the rights to the novel.[2]

Filming locations
The picture was filmed in Belém do Pará, Pará, Brazil.

[edit] Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews from film critics.

Film critic Vincent Canby, writing for The New York Times, has mixed feelings about the film, but he did like the acting and the screenplay. He wrote, "At Play in the Fields of the Lord doesn't play smoothly, but it often plays well...Mr. Lithgow and Miss Hannah, who grows more secure as an actress with every film, are fine in complex roles that are exceptionally well written...Though the film features a spectacular penultimate sequence, it seems not to know how to end. It sort of drifts away, perhaps trying to soften its own well-earned pessimism."[3]

Roger Ebert read the novel and believes the film is true to its themes. Ebert says that producer Saul Zaentz has a history of producing "unfilmable" source material. In a review that basically reviews the plot, he wrote, "Watching it, we are looking at a morality play about a world in which sincere people create unwitting mischief so that evil people can have their way. The movie essentially argues that all peoples have a right to worship their own gods without interference, but it goes further to observe that if your god lives in the land and the trees, then if we destroy your land, we kill your god. These messages are buried in the very fabric of the film, in the way it was shot, in its use of locations, and we are not told them, we absorb them."[4]

[edit] Cast and ratings

Ratings
Argentina:  13
Finland:  K-12
Netherlands:  AL
Spain:  13
United Kingdom:  15
United States:  R

[edit] Awards

Wins

Nominations

  • Golden Globe: Golden Globe; Best Original Score - Motion Picture, Zbigniew Preisner; 2002.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ At Play in the Fields of the Lord at the Internet Movie Database
  2. ^ IMDb. Ibid.
  3. ^ Canby, Vincent. The New York Time, film review, "Saving the Savages, but Losing Themselves," December 6, 1991.
  4. ^ Ebert, Roger. The Chicago Sun-Times, film review, December 6, 1991.

[edit] External links

In other languages