Los Angeles Times

‘Dial a Prayer’ is a wrong number

- — Gary Goldstein

“Dial a Prayer” doesn’t work. I refer to the elusive drama written and directed by Maggie Kiley, not the erstwhile spiritual phone line. One hopes, however, the latter was more effective than this film, which has a lot on its mind but doesn’t quite know how to express it.

Cora (Brittany Snow) is a small-town girl who’s done a bad thing and is sentenced to community service at an inspiratio­nal call center. Brittle and surly, Cora resents her new job, has zero knack for it and rankles her religious-leader boss (William H. Macy).

Cora must also interact with her eclectic, committed co-workers as well as with her sad mother (Glenne Headly), with whom Cora’s living during her “rehabilita­tion.”

Things shift for Cora when out-of-towner Chase (Tom Lipinski) shows up at her workplace claiming he was greatly helped by Cora’s counsel. She’s unnerved by his mysterious appearance until she finds herself unexpected­ly drawn to the gentle young man. But everything is not what it seems.

The troubling crime that sent Cora’s life into a tailspin would have benefited from a more direct, upfront portrayal instead of via Kiley’s slow, unsatisfyi­ng reveal. But as with much else here — how exactly Cora becomes a Dial a Prayer sensation, details of Cora’s parents’ estrangeme­nt — the filmmaker’s lessis-more approach leaves us adrift instead of enlightene­d. The sluggish pacing doesn’t help.

Snow is excellent, though, as she attempts to inhabit her murky character. If only we had a better sense of what the movie was trying to say about faith — or the lack thereof. “Dial a Prayer.” MPAA rating: PG-13 for thematic elements, brief strong language, drug use, suggestive material. Running time: 1 hour, 37 minutes. Playing: Laemmle’s Music Hall 3, Beverly Hills. Also on VOD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States