• About MT
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • RSS Feeds

Get our issue, highlights, free stuff and more!

  • Blogs
  • News
  • Arts+Culture
  • Music
  • Watch
  • Eat
  • Sports
  • Best of
  • Calendar
  • Classifieds
  • Slideshows
  • Choice Picks
  • Free Stuff
  • Careers
  • Dating
  • Clubs
  • Archives
  • MMJ
  • Blowout
  • Adult Classifieds
  • Trending
    • CALENDAR
    • RESTAURANTS
    • CLUBS

    Calendar

    Search thousands of events in our database.

    Restaurants

    Search hundreds of restaurants in our database.

    Nightlife

    Search hundreds of clubs in our database.

    Detroit Daily Deals powered by ReferLocal
    Trending
    • Comments
    • Popular Threads
    • Most Read
    Most Read
    • Film Review: Man of Steel This latest Superman iteration is a visual feast but light on character development. | 6/14/2013
    • From Motown to Coketown? Is keeping the petroleum byproduct known as “petcoke” stored, in the open, on the bank of the Detroit River a wise decision? | 6/12/2013
    • Film Review: Before Midnight The Before series earns its hat trick with the release of Richard Linklater's third installment. | 6/13/2013
    • What’s next for Detroit? Suggestions for Kevyn Orr | 6/12/2013
    • Moo Cluck Moo A better burger | 6/12/2013
    • Film Review: The Purge Not even this rag can print the proper language that this crap film inspires. | 6/12/2013
    • 10 Most Absurd Sex Tips from the Christian Right Evangelical Advice | 5/29/2013
    MT on Twitter
    Tweets by @metrotimes
    MT on Facebook

    Print Email

    Screens

    The Forgiveness of Blood

    Family Feud - Quietly intense drama packs in a lot of conflict and suspense.

    Photo: , License: N/A


    By Corey Hall

    Published: March 21, 2012

    The Forgiveness of Blood

    Directed by Joshua Marston. Written by Marston and Andamion Murataj. Starring Tristan Halilaj, Sindi Lacej, Refet Abazi, Zana Hasaj. Running time: 109 minutes. Not rated. 

    B

    Rural Albania, at least as presented in Joshua Marston's quietly intense drama, does not appear to be a very inviting place. Oh, sure: The land itself, rambling plains and golden fields set between gently rambling green mountains, is a lovely sight, but it's a place where life's endless little indignities are especially harsh. It's a place where the past and future rest uncomfortably closely, slowly grinding each other down. Gruff family man Mark (Refet Abazi) scrapes out a living in likely the same way his forefathers did a century ago; delivering bread with a single horse-drawn cart. His daily route involves a shortcut through farmland that once belonged to his family, but is now owned by rivals, who are none too happy with the trespassing. Clearly there are long-simmering tribal, religious or personal reasons fueling this feud, but the details remain vague. Offscreen, there's a fight, a man dies, and Mark goes into hiding to avoid retribution. As the village elders dither over arcane laws and customs of conflict resolution, the family's forced to muddle on, with most of the burden falling on Mark's teenage children, son Nik (Tristan Halilaj) and daughter Rudina (Sindi Laçej). Like any regular high school kids, they're more interested in texting, new jeans and hanging out with their friends than they are with duty, honor or ancient blood feuds, but they have little choice in the matter. There is now a large target on Nik's back, and Rudina has to take up the delivery route, and haggle with black market dealers for cigarettes and other goods to keep everyone afloat. Neither sibling is ready for, or wants part of, this adult world — they each have dreams of some better, distant horizons.

    Director Joshua Marston won heaps of praise for his debut feature, Maria Full of Grace, and his sophomore effort shows a similar intelligence and affinity for an alien landscape, and for decent people pushed into extraordinary circumstances by poverty and traditions beyond their understanding. What's lacking here is the churning urgency that made the drug-smuggling drama of Maria so compelling; the danger is more ephemeral here, and the plot is less dynamic. Halilaj is a solid young actor, though too often left to stare off into the distance, and through long, silent passages, we're left to wonder what's in his head. In the end, when Nik finally shakes his funk and displays enormous, foolish courage, it's gratifying, though his true feelings, like so much of these people's lives, and the homeland they're rooted in, is unknowable.


    Opens Friday, March 23, at the Landmark Main Art Theatre, 118 N. Main St., Royal Oak; 248-263-2111.

    > Email Corey Hall

    We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

    To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

    Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
    comments powered by Disqus


    Metro Times

    733 St Antoine

    Detroit, MI 48226

    Main: (313) 961-4060

    Advertising: (313) 961-4060

    Classified: (313) 962-5277

    Contact MT | Advertise | National Advertising | Work Here

    All parts of this site Copyright © 2013 Detroit Metro Times.

    News

    News+Views

    Politics & Prejudices

    News Hits

    Stir It Up

    Higher Ground

    Blogs

    Music Blahg

    News Blawg

    Reckless Eyeballing

    The B-Roll

    Eat Blog

    Best of Detroit

    Best of Detroit

    Music

    Music Homepage

    Album Reviews

    Add Music Event

    Search Music Events

    Arts

    Arts Homepage

    Book Reviews

    Culture

    Culture Homepage

    Savage Love

    Motor City Cribs & Rides

    Watch

    Watch Homepage

    Film Reviews

    Sports

    Sports Homepage

    Events

    Calendar

    Search Calendar Events

    Enter Calendar Event

    Art

    Auditions

    Comedy

    Community

    Dance

    Film

    Fun for all

    Holiday

    Issues And Learning

    Music

    Shopping

    Sports

    Theater

    Food

    Food Homepage

    Find a Restaurant

    Clubs

    Find a Club

    Classified

    Classified Home

    Place Ad

    Jobs

    Services

    Stuff For Sale

    Massage

    Personals

    Adult

    Automotive

    Cars, Trucks+More

    Services

    Real Estate

    Real Estate

    For Rent

    Roommates

    Archives

    Search Archives

    Search Authors

    Search Issues

    Latest Comments

    Get Our Newsletters

    Enter your email address to get our weekly emails.

     

    Metro Times Stuff

    Win Free Stuff

    Slideshows

    Velvet Rope Photos

    Event Photos

    Social Media

    Facebook

    MySpace

    Flickr

    Twitter

    Youtube

    RSS Feed

     Full Feed