Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 22 January

By January 22, 2025No Comments

Doubt (Shanley, 2009)

Philip Seymour Hoffman in the 2008 film Doubt, written and directed by John Patrick Shanley.

On this day 16 years ago, I pos­ted this Capital Times review of the ter­rif­ic drama, Doubt – John Patrick Shanley’s adapt­a­tion of his own hit play.

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In the Bronx in 1964, a pro­gress­ive young Catholic priest (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is accused by har­rid­an head­mis­tress Meryl Streep of abus­ing 12-year-old pupil Donald Miller. In a series of lengthy scenes between Hoffman, Streep, wit­ness Sister James (Amy Adams) and the boy’s moth­er (little-known Viola Davis more than hold­ing her own in this heavy­weight com­pany) the invest­ig­a­tion is played out.

Only it isn’t really an invest­ig­a­tion – just a hunch fol­lowed by polit­ic­al and emo­tion­al man­oeuv­ring to pro­voke the down­fall of a pos­sibly inno­cent man. There are many com­plex­it­ies to take account of: Miller is the only black child in a school full of Irish and Italian kids, he’s a sens­it­ive soul look­ing for a fath­er fig­ure, Hoffman insists he is simply inno­cently tend­ing his flock. None of this is enough for the sour old Principal who believes her know­ledge of human nature trumps all.

When Doubt was play­ing on Broadway many crit­ics drew par­al­lels with the Bush II rush to war in Iraq, based on faith rather than facts (which Shanley hasn’t denied), but with a little dis­tance the broad­er implic­a­tions of faith versus doubt are allowed some air.

It’s sad to look back on a time when we thought we would have Philip Seymour Hoffman forever but also instruct­ive to see Viola Davis described as “little-known”. I don’t think that was true even then, except to goofs like me. From memory she doesn’t just “hold her own”, she all-but steals the film in her few scenes.

Also reviewed that week in the Capital Times: Will Smith mis­fire Seven Pounds (“… suf­fers from a mad­den­ing script and, frankly, a totally mis­guided con­cep­tion which someone should have put a stop to much soon­er. Yet, it con­tin­ues to look beau­ti­ful, and the per­form­ances remain first rate, right up until the most lun­at­ic of loose ends are tied up and you are released once again, bewildered, in to the Wellington sun­shine”) and Italian drama My Brother is an Only Child (“When it comes, the twist is like a kid­ney punch, suck­ing all the air out of you. You’ve grown to like all these char­ac­ters with their pas­sion­ate, express­ive, emo­tion­al Italian-ness and by the end you find you really care – some­thing that the clever-clever Seven Pounds was nev­er likely to achieve.”)


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Where to watch Doubt

Aotearoa, Canada, India, : Streaming on Netflix

Australia: Digital rental

Ireland & UK: Streaming on Netflix and Paramount+

USA: Streaming on Paramount+