When it’s past midnight and all you can hear is your fridge humming, let this Film by Billy Thornton help you drift into dreamland
What a good low budget film. Enjoy.
Slow moving, endearing at times and kinda painful in others. Really a "best and worst of people" kinda movie. If you're into action or fast paced movies, skip it, but otherwise I'd recommend it.
Predictable and contrived but still quite watchable (if you can put up with BBT overdoing the method acting) for a relaxed 150 minutes
But not quite sure why I don't rate it as high as so many others.
I was skeptical of this movie for many years. I've never understood the Hollywood fascination with with showering accolades on actors that play disabled people. After all, guys have pretended to be disabled since we could talk. If you're a woman and you doubt this, ask your guy to do an imitation of a disabled person. I'm not saying it is right or that we're proud of it. I'm just saying that we can all do it. Has there been a more overrated performance that Hoffman in "Rain Man"? At least he did it well.... I've seen bits and pieces of "I Am Sam" and it looks like Sean Penn was a retarded guy on helium.
Anyway, it was clear from the opening minute of the movie that this was something different. First of all, the Billy Bob Thornton (who also wrote and directed the movie) somehow made his skull look like a neanderthal's dome. Think Billy Corrigan meets Private Pyle. More importantly, Thornton came up with a very unique character. Karl is just that - a character, not an imitation. Second, the movie was not a preachy flic about how disabled people are people too. In fact, we slowly learn that Karl is most likely not enabled. Mmm hmm.
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Review by whitsbrainVIP 5BlockedParent2022-01-15T17:04:21Z
"Sling Blade" is a Billy Bob Thornton fest. He wrote, directed and starred in the film and succeeded in all aspects. Thornton plays Karl, a mentally-challenged man who spent 20 years in a mental institution for killing his mother. Karl finds friends through his new job as a small engine mechanic and a teenage boy dealing with his mother's abusive boyfriend named Doyle. Without telling the story outright, Karl defends the boy and his mother from Doyle in his own tried and tested fashion.
It's heart-wrenching to see the slow-witted Karl come to his conclusion about what to do about Doyle. Karl doesn't view his act as a sacrifice but as a necessary act to ensure the safety of his newly found friends.
Karl is a gentle monster of a man who sees things as black and white, right and wrong. Doyle is a more complex beast, selfish and insecure, needy and nasty. Karl is the polar opposite of Doyle.
Too many people use Thornton's Karl as a source of humor. Quotes like "french-fried taters" and the guttural "Uh-hmm" that Karl uses in his conversations are funny at times, but seem necessary to lighten the heavy subject matter explored here. "Sling Blade" moves slowly. It's more accurate to say it moves slooooooowly. There is no action to be found. There are long conversations with even longer gaps when no one says a word. The leisurely pace of the film matches its southern setting perfectly (or at least the impression that people on the East and West coasts have of "fly-over country"). Overall, "Sling Blade" is an engrossing film with a star-studded lineup of actors telling a simple yet thoughtful story.