May
6, 2003, 8:45 a.m. No
Holes in Hole
A
smooth move from bookshelf to silver screen.
By Thomas Hibbs
t's
all because of my "no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather!"
That's the refrain, a sort of running family joke, of Stanley Yelnats
IV, the central character in the newly released Disney film Holes,
based on Louis
Sachar's immensely popular children's book. Unlike the first two Harry
Potter films, Holes makes a smooth transition from the printed
page to the big screen. Holes is a gem of a film, with a wonderful
script, a terrific cast, and something to say in a subtle way about chance,
destiny, reversals of fortune, friendship, and hope.
The story begins
with a pair of shoes falling out of the sky and hitting an unsuspecting
young boy, Stanley Yelnats IV, on the head. Stanley picks them up and
heads home, but he is soon arrested for stealing the shoes donated by
a famous athlete to be auctioned for charity. "All my life,"
Stanley laments, "I have been in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Misfortune runs in Stanley's family, dating back, according to legend,
to the curse a gypsy woman put on the first Stanley Yelnats (a name popular
in his family because of its palindromic quality).
Stanley is quickly
convicted and offered the option of jail or time at Camp Greenlake, an
unusual Texas reform school, where kids have nicknames such as Squid,
Armpit, Zigzag, X-Ray, and Zero. Once a wide body of water, Greenlake
is now a Texas desert, having suffered a drought that began, coincidentally
or maybe not just about the time townsfolk executed a young
black man for kissing the town's white female school teacher, who in despair
and vengeance then became the notorious criminal, "Kissing Kate"
Barlow.
"You take a
bad boy and make him dig holes in the hot sun all day long and you get
a good boy." This is the philosophy of the supervisor at Camp Greenlake,
Mr. Sir (played by Jon Voight, in a marvelous performance). The triumvirate
in charge of the camp Mr. Sir, Dr. Pendansky, and the warden (Sigourney
Weaver) constitutes a hierarchy of retribution, with the lowest
among them, Mr. Sir, taking out his frustrations on the kids. But the
warden has more than character education in mind with all this digging.
She's searching for some sort of treasure and, as we slowly learn, her
quest has something to do with the legend of the accursed Yelnats family.
In the course of the film, myth becomes history, and history in turn becomes
reality.
At the camp, Stanley
manages slowly to win the respect of his peers and befriends a black inmate,
nicknamed Zero for his seeming lack of intelligence. But Zero has simply
never had the chance to learn, even to read. When Stanley teaches him
to read, Zero's intelligence begins to manifest itself, as does his will
to survive. The friendship affords Stanley an opportunity to reverse the
curse visited on his family.
Given the expectations
of Hollywood films, Holes was something of a risk. It's a strange
cross between a kids' version of Cool Hand Luke and To Kill
a Mockingbird. Although it contains sporadic doses of action and a
number of very funny scenes, it has little in the way of special effects.
Like the book, the movie allows time for the characters and the story
to develop. The film seamlessly interweaves its two stories, ancient and
contemporary, both of which center on the now-barren lake. The pacing
is just right, and the sense of discovery, as viewers join Stanley in
piecing together a series of clues, is quite satisfying.
Every PG film in
recent memory has billed itself as a film for the entire family, equally
attractive to adults and youngsters. At a length of two hours and with
some scenes likely to confuse or frighten very young children, Holes
is not quite for the entire family. But it comes closer than most. And
it's such a captivating tale that it may well send young viewers back
to the book on which it is based.