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Adam (2009)
Release Date:
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
MPAA Rating:
PG-13
Rating Reason:
For thematic material, sexual content and language
Genre:
Comedy, Romance
Starring:
Hugh Dancy, Rose Byrne, Peter Gallagher, Amy Irving, Frankie Faison
Written By:
Max Mayer
Director:
Max Mayer
Official Site:
Synopsis:
Romance can be risky, perplexing and filled with the perils of miscommunication - and that's if you aren't Adam, for whom life itself is this way. In this heartfelt romantic comedy,
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Adam (2009) | Review
Loving Illogically
Elisabeth Leitch
And so begins the Fox Searchlight film Adam, the story of an unlikely romance between a young man living with Asperger's Syndrome and a young woman who didn't even know what Asperger's was until she met him. As it is set up, the tale we expect is one that will prove love's ability to conquer all differences and bridge even the greatest gaps of misunderstanding. As the complicated romance between Adam and Rose unfolds, their unique relationship serves as an extreme example of how difficult it can truly be relate to, understand, and love another human being. But as the film comes to a close, its message, like Adam and Beth's relationship, is not quite as simple as that of our favorite fairy tale. Much like the young man who tells the Emperor he is wearing no clothes in the story of The Emperor and His New Clothes that Beth reads to her class, Adam is a man who sees his world in black and white. As he tells Beth, his instinct is to assume that others think and feel exactly the way he does. To speak anything other than what he knows to be the truth defies the reason by which he operates. And to reach for anything beyond certainty, something he does not fully comprehend. In Beth, however, we find a slightly different way of thinking. We see their difference in perspective as Beth and Adam discuss Adam's job search: "I'm sure the right thing will come along," Beth tells Adam. "How can you be sure of that?" Adam responds. "I mean, I hope," Beth clarifies. We cannot ignore their disconnect as Adam tells Beth he needs her, and Beth tells Adam his need for her is not enough. And as Beth's own family is torn apart by her father's illegal actions, committed not for the benefit of them but for another woman, we see a very real basis for Beth's desire to know that her life and relationships aren't just about tangible promises and physical provisions but about relating to those she loves on a deeper level of almost illogical care and inexplicable connection. As one of Adam and Beth's early conversations reveals, the difference between the way Adam sees the world and the way Beth sees it is almost akin to the difference between a world in which God exists and one in which He doesn't. As Adam sees it, the universe is a collection of theories and formulas and figures. As Beth puts it when Adam asks what she knows about the Big Bang, "In the beginning, God created&ellips;" As we see through Adam, according to a world defined by pure logic, a lie or betrayal perpetrated in a relationship is means for immediate disconnect. As Beth reveals, however, to cut off a relationship with someone she loves, no matter how much he has wronged her, is something she is simply not willing to do. And so it is with God. Continue: 1 2 Copyright © 2009 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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