The Burning PlainThough structurally troubled, this directorial debut from Guillermo Arriaga is a gut-wrenching look at the wages of our wrongdoing.Review by Alissa Wilkinson | posted 9/18/2009 08:48AM

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The Burning Plain
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MPAA rating: R (for sexuality, nudity, and language)

Genre: Drama
Theater release: September 18, 2009 by 2929 Productions
Directed by: Guillermo Arriaga
Runtime: 1 hour 51 minutes
Cast: Charlize Theron (Sylvia), Kim Basinger (Gina), Jennifer Lawrence (Mariana), José María Yazpik (Carlos)
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The Burning Plain, the directorial debut of Oscar-nominated screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga, tells a story that seems as if it could have been lifted directly from some hidden corner of the Old Testament: the sins of the fathers are visited on the children, faithlessness is repaid with heartbreak, and sins most certainly find the sinner out. Guilt, pain, love, hate, unfaithfulness, treachery, and fear are stretched across a backdrop that spans from Mexico to Oregon, across languages and families and landscapes, across three seemingly disparate stories:
- Sylvia (Charlize Theron) lives somewhere on the breaking point, sleeping with men at random but obviously intensely lonely and, deep down, disturbed. She works at a glamorous restaurant overlooking a swirling ocean and a rocky cliff, but it's clear that the real storm is within. One day, a mysterious stranger (José María Yazpik) starts following her around, and the secret he carries will rock her to her core.
- Gina (Kim Basinger), despite the existence of a loving husband and four beautiful children, is having a torrid affair, but when her eldest daughter—the teenage Mariana (Jennifer Lawrence)—begins to suspect her mother, she sets in motion a chain of events that will alter the destiny of many.
- A pair of brothers visits a burned-out trailer in the middle of nowhere, just before their father's funeral. One is bitter; the other is mostly curious, longing to know more of his father. His curiosity leads him toward another who has a similar loss, but their unlikely liaison is not destined for happiness.

Charlize Theron as Sylvia
This would be a great film, but its narrative structure just won't allow it. True to form, Arriaga (who wrote Amores Perros, 21 Grams, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, and Babel) uses several different but loosely intertwined storylines to tell this tale, drawing the threads together at a key moment for maximum impact.
That's all fine, and as Arriaga's earlier scripts show, it can be a strong way to make a story; unfortunately, it just doesn't quite work in this one. Without revealing too much, I will say that these threads are stretched over time, not space, and their nonlinear structure makes it difficult to follow what's going on for the first half of the film. By the time we get it, we've spent too long trying to catch up to be fully engaged in the story. It's not a death knell for the film, and it's clear why Arriaga chooses to use this kind of device to tell this specific story, but it still detracts from the overall force of the film.

Kim Basinger as Gina, Joaquim de Almeida as Nick
Chronologies aside, the intricately twined narratives still lack some of the passionate realism of Arriaga's other scripts. Frankly, characters in the midst of extramarital affairs of any kind are rarely sympathetic, and although we slowly come to understand the tragedy of Sylvia's life, it comes too late to really make us care.
Shot by the venerable cinematographer Robert Elswit (Syriana, Good Night and Good Luck, and all of P.T. Anderson's films, including There Will Be Blood), the film's vistas are at times truly breathtaking, from Pacific Northwestern breakers on rocks below a cliff to the hot, dry plains of Mexico. The film's cast, which Arriaga directs well, performs ably in such an emotional story, but it is Jennifer Lawrence's performance that stands out, as she portrays a teenager torn between love and hate, grief and guilt, romance and despair.
The tale is deeply sad. There is simply no cure or easy out for these people. Tragedy seems to be around every corner; joy has no part in their lives, or at least not for long. A parent's actions have lasting consequences upon children and grandchildren.

Jennifer Lawrence as Mariana, J.D. Padro as Santiago
Even when the film ends, we know that these people face a long, difficult road, and that many wounds will never be healed. Sylvia pleads for forgiveness, but the words seem hollow, almost ridiculous to our ears. This is the simple truth of betrayal: we can be forgiven, but to earn back the trust we destroyed is all but impossible.