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Becoming Death: Cinema & the Atomic Age

Friday, August 11, 1995
Desert Bloom
Eugene Corr U.S., 1985

Desert Bloom is about the lost innocence of an adolescent girl, her family, and an entire country. Set in early 1951, the film chronicles the tumultuous coming-of-age of a thirteen-year-old (Annabeth Gish) in an unsettled household roiling with an alcoholic stepfather (Jon Voight), traumatized by memories of WWII; a frustrated mother (Jobeth Williams) seeking comfort in the vacuity of fifties optimism, and a worldly aunt (Ellen Barkin) who brings a frankness of feeling to this nuclear unit. On the outskirts of their dusty Nevada town, the government is preparing Yucca Flats for A-bomb testing. Director Corr uses the bomb as a metaphor, almost a character, that parallels the disruption of the family but also suggests a generalized sense of cultural helplessness. As the mushroom cloud rises above the horizon, we are reminded of the fragility of the single family dwelling.-Steve Seid

• Written by Corr, from a story by Linda Remy, Corr. Photographed by Reynaldo Villalobos. With Annabeth Gish, Jon Voight, Ellen Barkin, Jobeth Williams. (106 mins, Color, 35mm, From Columbia Repertory)