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Holes |
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Five feet by five feet. These are the
dimensions of Stanley Yelnats’ days. Every 24
hours he digs a hole that’s five feet in
diameter and five feet deep in the barren,
sun-scorched earth of Camp Green Lake, a
"getaway" for juvenile delinquents. His
pedantic counselor Dr. Pendanski and the
sunflower seed-spitting enforcer Mr. Sir both
tell him he’s digging holes to build his
character. But Stanley doesn’t particularly
need to have his character built since
he was arrested for a crime he didn’t commit.
(Not surprising considering the Yelnats
family’s century-old run of bad luck that began
when a fortuneteller cursed Stanley’s
no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-g
randfather.) So it’s understandable that he’s a
bit skeptical about his overseers’ desire to
make him a better member of society through
manual labor. He and his fellow inmates—the
aptly nicknamed X-Ray, Armpit, Zig-Zag,
Magnet, Squid and Zero—are told that they’ll
get a day off from work if they find something
"interesting" while they’re digging. Something
interesting enough to please the
tough-as-nails Warden, that is.
It should be noted at this point that the
powers-that-be at Camp Green Lake don’t
really care about character. They’re
looking for something and using their charges
to find it. As time passes and Stanley ponders
the mystery of what everyone’s searching for,
a greater enigma begins to unfold. And that
enigma is buried in a hole, coated in dust. It
hasn’t rained for over 100 years at Camp
Green Lake, not since a terrible atrocity turned
Kissin’ Kate Barlow into an outlaw. ...
•
positive elements: Buried in
Holes is a hefty cache of worthwhile
themes, but most of them are handled
descriptively rather than overtly. Bullying gets
denounced when Stanley is seen being
poked, prodded, pushed and scorned by his
"friends" at Camp Green Lake. True friendship
is lauded when Stanley takes the universally
avoided Zero under his wing, teaching the
socially unengaged half-pint to read and
ultimately saving his life. Irrational prejudice is
decried when the film shows a violent social
upheaval that boils up after Kate Barlow
shares a kiss with Sam, an African-American
onion dealer. The nature of real justice
is displayed by showing its opposite in the
sanctimonious yet hypocritical Pendanski, the
cruel Mr. Sir and the dictatorial Warden. The
love of family, insufficiency of surface beauty,
need for perseverance, all-consuming nature
of greed and necessity of getting a good
education receive equally positive and
subtle emphasis. A note to parents: While
subtlety sometimes makes for engaging
viewing, it also make it easier to wrongly
interpret or miss the point entirely. Consider a
pre- and post- Holes family chat if you
choose to indulge.
•
spiritual content: A couple of Biblical
allusions pop up (mainly a reference to the
Flood and a landmark called God’s Thumb).
But its the nebulous concept of "destiny"
provides the film’s spiritual framework.
Stanley’s grandfather, also named Stanley
(Stanley is "Yelnats" backwards), claims that
the men in his family are hexed "always and
forever" because Stanley’s
great-great-grandfather broke a promise he
made to a fortuneteller. The claim isn’t entirely
true since (without giving too much away) the
so-called curse doesn’t last "always
and forever." What viewers learn is that an
impersonal force is seeking to right wrongs
and rectify injustices in the Yelnats family and
elsewhere. If Holes had substituted
God for Destiny, it wouldn’t be problematic. As
it stands, the spirituality of the movie is
misleading, but not heavy-handed. It may
serve as a platform for parents to remind their
children that the self-existent and very
personal Yahweh is the one who sets the
outcome of human lives, not fate or destiny
(read Romans 8:28, Ephesians 1:11, Job
42:2).
•
nudity and sexual content: Stanley
briefly appears in his underwear while
changing into his Camp Green Lake
regulation jumpsuit. A scoundrel leers at a
woman who makes spiced fruit, commenting
that he enjoys "peaches." Stanley becomes
nervous about showering once he discovers
that the Warden has miniature cameras
hidden all over the camp (a number of boys
make crude jokes about the spying). After
seeing the words "Mary Lou" emblazoned on a
boat, Stanley jokes that she must have looked
great in a bikini (an ironic comment since Mary
Lou is a donkey).
•
violence and gore: The opening
scene shows a "camper" allowing himself to
be bitten by a rattlesnake in order to escape
(the bite is masked by a succession of quick
camera cuts). Stanley gets knocked to the
ground by a pair of shoes that fall from the sky.
He’s regularly shoved and bullied by his fellow
campers. Gunplay is integral to the Kissin’
Kate Barlow mythos, but clever camera work
and editing shield viewers from explicit
violence. Elsewhere, a man is shot, but he’s
seen from a great distance. Stanley’s hands
blister and bleed as he digs his first hole. Mr.
Sir blasts a virulent yellow-spotted lizard with
his revolver and audiences catch a quick
glimpse of its corpse. An insane woman
allows one of the toxic critters to bite her
(she’d rather die than tell a secret to a
rifle-wielding thug). Campers find themselves
trapped in a hole by scores of the lethal
beasties. The film’s most intense moment
comes when the angry Warden scratches Mr.
Sir on the face after applying a fresh coat of
venom-infused fingernail polish. The poison
causes him to writhe on the ground in agony
and leaves his face puffy and discolored. Zero
hits a mocking Dr. Pendanski in the face with
a shovel. Later he cuts his hands while
helping Stanley up a cliff. A violent mob storms
through a town and sets a schoolhouse on
fire. Stanley drives a truck into a hole.
•
crude or profane language:
Unfortunately, God’s name is abused
almost 10 times. About half a dozen mild
profanities ("d--n" and "h---") crop up. Crudities
and put-downs such as "schmuck," "jackass,"
"cow turd," "fart" and "Neanderthal" turn up,
"crap" being the most common.
•
drug and alcohol content: A
recovering nicotine addict, Mr. Sir eats
sunflower seeds to keep from smoking (by the
end of the movie he’s reverted to the old
habit). A number of unsavory characters drink.
A fortuneteller puffs on a pipe.
•
other negative elements: Stanley
sleeps on a stained cot (its previous occupant
was nicknamed Barf Bag). Armpit suffers from
horrible body odor and flatulence. After eating
fermented food in order to stay alive in the
desert, Zero vomits. Stanley lies in his letters
about the great time he’s having at camp so
that his mother won’t worry. He also lies to
keep other campers from getting in trouble
when they steal Mr. Sir’s sunflower seeds.
Stanley steals a truck to go save Zero when
he’s stranded in the desert.
•
conclusion: With its striking
cinematography, vivid character development,
complex plot and deft treatment of universal
human themes, Holes is a much
deeper film than its "Home Alone 6:
Danger in the Desert" promotional
campaign indicates. Originally a novel, the
story won a Newberry Award in 1999 for
excellence in children’s literature. And unlike
many book-to-film conversions, this movie
maintains the book’s distinction. It didn’t hurt
that author Louis Sachar penned the
screenplay.
Every family considering diving into
Holes will have to grapple with whether
or not the film’s occasional crudity, violent
scenes and misuses of the Lord’s name
push it out of bounds. But this movie presents
another dilemma of sorts. Holes
doesn’t quickly fill in all the questions it
unearths. Was the curse on the Yelnats family
genuine or merely a quirk of fate? Should we
sympathize with the heartbroken Kissin’ Kate
Barlow or decry her murderous thievery? How
much does the perseverance of Stanley’s dad
contribute to his success as an inventor and
how much of it is the machinations of destiny?
This descriptive film offers such forthright
commentary only occasionally, letting viewers
work to make the various ethical connections.
"I never set out to teach a lesson," says
Sachar. "My goal [has] always [been] to write a
fun, entertaining and thought-provoking story.
Any messages, and I think there are many in
[the] book, come naturally out of the story." The
same holds true for the movie and that’s good
or bad depending on how you look at it. Those
who want a neat and tidy moral lesson free of
loose ends will be frustrated by the movie’s
seeming lack of clarity. Parents looking for a
well-crafted cinematic tale with lots to talk
about afterwards will consider it a treasure
trove.
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