by Greg Bellavia
(2005-11-30)
2005, Un-rated, 115 minutes, Bjornquist Films
The life of a microbudget filmmaker is not an easy one. Concerns
that would plague any film production such as finding actors
and a useable script triple in importance seeing how these are
the tools which will help overcome your film’s lack of
professional polish. Given that from the start there are so
many factors working against you it is generally advised that
indie filmmakers stick to a topic that will be easy for them
to capture on screen as to not overextend themselves with a
story that would prove unfilmable using their modest means.
Certainly the two genres which would seem hardest to capture
upon a minuscule budget would either be science fiction or historical
drama. Keeping this in mind, the sheer perseverance of Whitney
Hamilton in adapting her own novel "Firefly" into
"My Brother’s War", a civil war period piece
directed by and starring herself is to be admired. While not
always one hundred percent successful in transcending its low
budget, Hamilton’s film exhibits an authentic feel for
its material along with a solid, ever evolving story.
With her fiancé vowing loyalty to the Union army and
her brother Henry (Ryan Tramont) joining the Confederate cause,
Grace Kieler (Whitney Hamilton) is left alone to help care for
her father and the family's land. Upon her father’s death
Grace conducts a search for her brother amongst the Confederate
ranks by impersonating a man but soon finds herself enlisted.
Complicating Grace’s search is the fact that Henry has
been asked to act as a spy for the South and infiltrates a Union
unit run by the melancholy Colonel Wright (Thom Milano). As
Henry does his best to sabotage the Union from within, Grace
finds herself making the acquaintance of Virginia (Dana Bennison),
a bereft woman who recently lost her son who finds solace with
Grace’s sensitive, male alter ego. As the relationship
between Grace and the misguided Virginia intensifies the Union
Army grows ever closer to exposing the spy in their ranks.
Obviously "My Brother’s War" is a labor of
love for Whitney Hamilton and that devotion to the material
is what gives the film its strength. Hamilton has an ear for
the dialogue of the period and the story seems much more natural
than bigger budgeted period pieces such as "Cold Mountain".
Quiet moments such as Colonel Wright addressing a subordinate
(Ed Moran), asking him about his family and telling him he hopes
they stay in contact after the war, feel genuine and it is a
credit to the cast that the material is able to flow as well
as it does. With this said, there are several flaws which Hamilton
and company are unable to overcome. Larger battle scenes are
obviously taken from civil war reenactment footage and have
too much of a home movie feel. Once the story gets going it
soars, but the opening half hour is sluggish and could have
been trimmed some in order to get to the meat of the story.
These gripes are small, however, considering how Hamilton is
able to do so much with so little.
An indie which is able to survive thanks to the effort and
perseverance of its creator, "My Brother’s War"
is microbudget film worth a look.