
THE VISIT - R-RATED
This well meaning attempt to depict the spiritual redemption of a wrongly imprisoned
young man is horribly lost amid bad direction and poor screenwriting, all by
the same person - Jordan Walker Pearlman
Hill Harper plays Alex Waters, a heroin/crack addict who is in the slammer
for a rape that he says he didn't commit. He is estranged from his middle class parents
(Billy Dee Williams and Marla Gibbs) and
upstanding big brother Tony (Obba Babatundé). Angry that his parents have never
visited him during the five years he's been in prison, Alex begs Tony to speak on his
behalf and get them to come see him. The visit that ensues is one filled with anger and
disappointment over a son who has failed them, and for the son, parents seemingly oblivious to
his plight. Alex' secret is that he has contracted AIDS and knows he is dying. Rae Dawn Chong
shows up toward the end as a childhood friend, a former drug addict and the victim of
fatherly molestation who has been saved by the church. She's there to offer him some kind of
solace.
The problem with the film is the overuse (from the first scene) of highly intrusive
jazz and gospel music
and fantasy sequences in place of present day story. Alex' so-called redemption is never
fully explored or actually depicted, but merely referred to by his brother using a few
choice 'flashbacks' involving Alex and
Chong's Felicia McDonald character. It takes far too long to get the viewer involved to the
point of caring about any of it. As for the performances, the actors are good. Too bad they
had such meager pickings to play toward. Phylicia Rashad appears as Dr. Coles and
Talia Shire plays a parole committee member.
Lotta says The Visit is not worth visiting.
Reviewed 3/4/01
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