The adventure of digging ‘Holes’
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Dennis Piszkiewicz
Going to see a movie intended for kids is a risky business. You may
find yourself sitting through two hours of gratuitous special
effects, precocious child actors, lame plots, gross-out humor and the
always safe but trite message, “Be yourself.”
The movie “Holes” is based on a well-respected book of the same
title by Louis Sachar. My daughter tells me that the book is very
good and that it is very popular with fourth-grade readers. The
movie, I am happy to say, escapes the cliches of the genre and is
likely to be as popular as the book, if not more so.
The central character of “Holes” is Stanley Yelnats, IV, the
fourth in a line of Stanley Yelnats’ who believe that they are doomed
to be losers in life because of a curse put on Stanley’s
great-great-grandfather and his heirs by a fortuneteller. Young
Stanley is arrested -- unjustly, of course -- for stealing a pair of
athletic shoes once owned by a celebrity baseball player. He accepts
an 18-month sentence at Camp Green Lake as his destiny.
The camp, he discovers, is on a dry lakebed surrounded by a
hundred miles of desert in all directions. Its inmates spend their
days digging holes five feet deep and five feet in diameter because,
according to their overseer, Mr. Sir, it builds character. Anybody
can see that they are digging for something that Mr. Sir and the
camp’s warden want. What they find is a story that goes back to a
series of crimes in the old west and to the origin of the Yelnats
family curse.
The film belongs to a half-dozen young actors who play the inmates
of Camp Green Lake, chief among them, Shia LeBeouf as Stanley. They
all appear to be regular kids with individual quirks but with a knack
for getting into trouble that got them sent to camp. The adults play
arrogant and corrupt clowns, as they often do in real life. Jon
Voight is delightfully sleazy as the overseer, and Sigourney Weaver,
as the warden, is as mean as a rattlesnake.
The story is complicated enough that I had to have my daughter
explain a couple of its twists to me after we left the theater. In
its unpretentious way, “Holes” is an epic of good and evil, danger
and adventure. Above all, it is entertaining. Kids may also pick up
something about friendship, loyalty, good character and taking
control of one’s own destiny, which is a bonus.
“Holes” is an engaging adventure that is worth seeing, even if
you’re not a member of the pre-high school set.
* DENNIS PISZKIEWICZ is a Laguna Beach resident.
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