Times Colonist

Dark and windy road leads to spirituali­ty of The Shack

- KATIE WALSH

The Shack Where: SilverCity Starring: Sam Worthingto­n, Octavia Spencer and Avraham Aviv Alush Directed by: Stuart Hazeldine Parental advisory: PG Rating: Two stars out of four

If Octavia Spencer is God, then Lord, take me to church. A folksy Spencer serving up homemade baked goods is the vision of the divine in The Shack, Stuart Hazeldine’s non-denominati­onal, magical realist, faithbased drama, an adaptation of the bestsellin­g novel by William P. Young.

But it’s a dark and windy road to get to that beatific image, delving into the personal history of Mack Phillips (Sam Worthingto­n), a wayward soul who has been dealt a few bad cards in life and needs a restorativ­e stay to get right with himself.

Adapted by John Fusco, Andrew Lanham and Destin Cretton, the story is nested inside a flashback narrated by Tim McGraw’s character, a pastor named Willie, and takes a leisurely non-linear path to get to where it’s going.

Mack had a rough childhood marred by domestic violence, forging his understand­ing of God as wrathful, punishing and judgmental.

That worldview is only further exacerbate­d by the abduction of his youngest daughter, Missy (Amelie Eve), snatched from under his nose during a family camping trip.

Plunged into depression, Mack receives a mysterious invitation in the mail: a note from Papa (his wife’s name for God) asking him to a weekend getaway at the shack where his daughter was likely killed.

Seeking revenge, or at least some answers, he heads to the woods. There he’s greeted not by a child killer, but by three groovy spiritual teachers in a tropical wooded paradise: God, a.k.a. Papa (Spencer); Jesus (Avraham Aviv Alush); and The Holy Spirit Sarayu (Sumire).

It’s easy to have some flippant fun with the premise, and it’s needed, since the framing story is profoundly dark and depressing, rendered in the style of a soap opera or television movie, heavy on the voiceover, the flashbacks, the haunting memories.

But once he’s at the God Spa, despite all the hokey walking on water, caves of Wisdom, and magical gardens, the things that Papa, Jesus and Sarayu have to say are pretty profound.

The brand of Christiani­ty on display here is an idealized form of spirituali­ty that’s inclusive, relaxed and open.

The film knowingly features a Middle Eastern Jewish Jesus, for heaven’s sake. Faith-based films have been gaining traction in the industry, catering to an underserve­d audience.

While they run the gamut of genre and tone, the presentati­on of Christian faith remains the same — positive, open, loving, ignoring any messy real-world politics that might be associated with modern Christiani­ty.

In this brightened vision, who wouldn’t want to reserve a stay in the God B&B?

Worthingto­n is an apt choice for this role. He’s always been a bit of a blank slate to project onto, a sponge to soak up every life lesson.

His Mack feels empty, all the more ready to be filled with the positive vibes he gets from his new friends.

The spiritual teachers spend the weekend reiteratin­g to Mack that God doesn’t judge, God only loves, and impressing upon him the importance of forgivenes­s and compassion so that he can move beyond the tragedy that has left him “stuck” in that shack.

Though the dialogue is written with all the finesse of a self-help book, and the visuals are a garish Technicolo­r explosion, there are some nuggets of wisdom that do resonate, regardless of personal belief.

 ??  ?? Avraham Aviv Alush and Sam Worthingto­n in The Shack.
Avraham Aviv Alush and Sam Worthingto­n in The Shack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada