John Huston directing, based on a novel by Flannery O'Connor, and staring a young Brad Dourf in a stand out performance. Wise Blood' tells the story of "Hazel "Haze" Motes is a 22-year-old veteran of an unspecified war and a preacher of the Church of Truth Without Christ, a religious organization of his own creation, which is against any belief in God, an afterlife, sin, or evil. Hazel comes across various characters such as teenager Sabbath Lilly Hawks, who is madly in love with him; her grandfather Asa Hawks who is a conventional sidewalk preacher, and pretends to be blind; and a local boy, Enoch Emery, who finds a "new" Jesus at the local museum in the form of the tiny corpse of a shrunken South American Indian." - Wikipedia.
This movie takes a turn about X - minutes in and becomes shockingly dark. There is alot going on in this picture, but most of it understated, most of it implied. There's the surfice and there is the sub floor, once that subfloor is broken into and made plain.... This is one of those film adaptations that feels more like a visual book then it does a movie. If that dosen't make sense now, it may well after you watch it. ****
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