Born Again Christian Movie Higher Ground

Vera Farmiga laughs as she recalls the perils of both starring in and directing a movie while pregnant with her second child. "We filmed the movie during my second trimester. The third trimester was postproduction. There was a lot going on!"

In the moving, remarkably evenhanded Higher Ground (opening Friday), Farmiga, making her directorial debut, stars as a devout Christian woman of the 1970s whose crisis of faith shakes not only her own soul but that of all those who love her. The actress had been developing the fact-based script with screenwriter Tim Metcalf for a long time, but it was hard to find both financing and a director for a film that covers 20 years in the life of a religious American woman. "When Tim suggested I direct, things started happening very quickly. Quicker than I would have liked! Suddenly there was a rush to shoot before I started to show. It was wild but unstoppable."

Onscreen and in person, too, Farmiga, 38, pulls one in, inviting intimacy. In movies, you can always see her thinking, which is a beautiful, often intense and regrettably rare quality in American actors. So far, people seem to remember her face more than her name — a point of dismay for her agent, no doubt, but surely the mark of an actor who goes deeply into character.

She's best known for being the police psychiatrist girlfriend to Matt Damon in The Departed and George Clooney's frequent-flier hookup in Up in the Air, a role that brought her an Oscar nomination. But it was her wrenching performance as a cocaine-addicted, working-class mother in Winter's Bone director Debra Granik's debut, Down to the Bone (2004), that put the actress on the map. That film appears to have deeply influenced her directorial choices on Higher Ground.

"The tone of it comes from my formative experience of Debra Granik as a storyteller," Farmiga says. "Of how just she is, and how she doesn't judge her characters or the situations they find themselves in."

In Higher Ground (based on Carolyn S. Briggs' 2002 memoir, This Dark World: A Memoir of Salvation Lost and Found), Farmiga plays Corinne, who first raises her hand as a little girl at vacation Bible school to accept Christ as her savior. (The teenage version of Corinne is played by Taissa Farmiga, Vera's younger sister.) Corinne isn't truly "born again" until her 20s, when a car accident nearly kills her, along with her rock musician husband (Joshua Leonard) and their baby daughter. Feeling that God had reached down to save them, Corinne and her husband become devout, eventually joining a fundamentalist community — the old-school kind, grounded in everyday faith, not outerworld politics. All is well, seemingly, until Corinne begins to feel doubt, about nearly everything.

There aren't too many in-demand rising stars, much less first-time directors, who'd risk taking on such socially potent themes, but the insular world of Higher Ground seems like a natural fit for Farmiga, who grew up in rural New Jersey, in a tight-knit, church-centric Ukrainian-American community.

She is reluctant to draw parallels. When I press hard on the connection between Corinne and her own upbringing, Farmiga hesitates, pulling her head back, a bit annoyed perhaps. "There's always an emphasis on defining, isn't there?" she says, almost to herself, and then plunges in. "My family is Christian. Ukrainian Catholic. I went to Ukrainian Catholic school and then, from seventh grade, I went to public school. Most of my extracurricular activities were Ukrainian. Ukrainian Girl Scouts. Called 'Plast,' not regular Girl Scouts. Ukrainian folk dancing. And yes, [for me], as it is for Corinne, the importance of community, and finding identity and expressing individuality within the sense of community, was always challenging.

"We went from that very liturgical — I don't want to call it 'rigid' — way of life, to exploring something looser, a more personal faith. Where you didn't have to go through a pastor to have a relationship with God but could have a direct one yourself. My parents were on a journey. There was always a strong emphasis on defining what God meant to you. That is their primary focus still. I feel like I bounce between these two fundamental ideas of faith."

Farmiga laughs when I ask if her parents have ever experienced doubt, as if she can't imagine such a thing of a mother and father she obviously reveres. "Maybe! Of course. Sure. They're human, right? My dad, I marvel at him. Seeing the fruits of the Spirit manifest in who he is. He's so gentle, peaceful, joyful, selfless. It's something I've marveled at my whole life. And have ... coveted, I guess. He's tapping into something that's pretty wild, but nonjudgmental and openhearted. Humble. Those are all things I wanted Higher Ground to be. To say, it's OK to doubt. Doubt is a good thing. Doubt means your mind is at work. It's universal, whether you're a believer or nonbeliever. We can all connect with the idea of not knowing. Of searching. Of yearning. That yearning is holiness."

 
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9 comments
Dctitch
Dctitch

NunyaWheeping and gnashing of teeth is the actual hell reserved for those who choose to not believe in their hearts and confess with their mouths that Jesus died on the cross for their sins and was raised from the dead, living now at the right hand of the Father. His very spirit inside of every heart giving person on earth. To miss out on this invitation would be to trade joy, peace, unconditional love, satisfaction and eternal bliss for 80 or so years of chasing all of the above on your own. In your life you will not find anyone or anything good. You will be let down and the depression and anxiety you will experience is just a taste of the eternal torment to come.Do you want to know that you are right where you were created to be? Accept Gods love by believing with your heart and saying it out loud. Then worship Him and stay close to Him by reading His Word, which is Jesus himself. You will be content because you will know, without doubt that The One who loves you has been chasing you and you have let Him catch you.

Pfunram
Pfunram

You would fit right in at the church from the movie 'Higher Ground. " You should watch it, you might just learn something a little more profound than the twisted crap that "Christianity" teaches, especially at the very end of the movie. You don't know God!

MissAlisonjenn
MissAlisonjenn

I just paíd $20.87 for an íPad 2.64GB and my boyfriend loves his Panasoníc Lumíx GF 1 Cámera that we got for $38.79 there arriving tomorrow by UP S.I will never pay such expensive retail príces in stores again. Especially when I also sold a 40 inch LCD T V to my boss for $657 which only cost me $62.81 to buy. Here is the website we use to get it all from : BidsBit.com

Kevin Schwartz
Kevin Schwartz

There are so many problems with this...interview?...I don't know where to begin. First: I didn't know who Vera Farmiga is, and I still don't know. Ukrainian Catholic, okay. Tells me nothing. Second: the movie itself. It may be a classic, destined for greatness, but from all I've heard here, I'd rather watch The Lost World again (the only movie I've ever walked out on). Sounds like a horrible and torturous bore. Third: it's just annoying - this whole...interview?...article?...yeah, plain annoying. But this is what the Weekly does best these days. If it's not pap, superhip or L.A.-centric, it won't appear in this magazine. But why be surprised? Look who owns it - the Village Voice, otherwise known as the Great Supporter of Sexually Exploited Women. The great ones who made the Weekly, who gave it the reputation it has today - one it absolutely does not deserve (though I could be the fool; maybe everyone knows of its tarnished rep) - I can't imagine they'd come back even if you begged them. Let's mention three of them right now: Michael Ventura, Steve Erickson and Manohla Dargis. Smart, interesting writers with depth and a real passion to loose the truth on the world. Artists.

God, I hate the LA Weekly!

Terrycart
Terrycart

You may check some information about Vera Framiga on Google before you read this. If you are not intersted in this topic, why did click your left mouse button?

MissJenniferLoa
MissJenniferLoa

I just paíd $20.87 for an íPad 2.64GB and my boyfriend loves his Panasoníc Lumíx GF 1 Cámera that we got for $38.79 there arriving tomorrow by UP S.I will never pay such expensive retail príces in stores again. Especially when I also sold a 40 inch LCD T V to my boss for $657 which only cost me $62.81 to buy. Here is the website we use to get it all from : BidsBit.com

CRC
CRC

A movie about a Christian? I'd rather eat glass. People drawn to religion have a mental illness.

Kneadles
Kneadles

I am a secular humanist and I like watching movies and reading books about people who lose their faith. It's like they finally wake up and start thinking instead of filling in all the blanks with scripture and blather about Jesus, like robots. I saw no difference in these characters from cult members. The same vapid adherence to dogma. It's weird and fascinating, but scary to think how easily humans can be hypnotised like sheeple.

Nunya
Nunya

Well I guess that does fit with the weeping and gnashing of your teeth.

 

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