Sundance Film Review: 8: The Mormon Proposition
We Utahns have a decided disadvantage as we watch 8: The Mormon Proposition—not much in the documentary is news to those of us living behind the Zion Curtain.
Filmmaker Reed Cowan does a fine job outlining the Mormon church's involvement in promoting the anti-gay marriage measure in California during the 2008 election season, and that might be enough for audiences content to simply vilify the church's conservative members. But those looking for a meaty dissection of how Prop 8 passed despite early popular support on the pro gay-marriage side—and particularly despite the fact its opponents outspent the pro-Prop 8ers—will find this film wanting.
That doesn't mean the film isn't worth seeing. Some of the stories Cowan elicits from gay Mormons are truly heartbreaking, whether he's talking to ex-Mormons whose families have turned their backs on their gay sons and daughters, or telling the story of a Mormon boy who committed suicide rather than disappoint his devout parents. It's powerful stuff, as is some of the investigative reporting done on how the LDS Church tried to cover its tracks when it got involved in a similar election in Hawaii a decade ago.
Some of the film's production choices I found bothersome, though. The ominous music Cowan layers beneath the audio clips of Mormon officials talking about the campaign seemed unnecessary and kind of cheesy. And a heavy focus on easy punching bags like Utahns Chris Buttars and Gayle Ruzicka might make for great quotes in the film, but I doubt many Mormons would consider them "typical."
Still, the Church deserves much of the criticism leveled here, especially considering its own history of what the film dubs "alternative marriage," ie. polygamy. And the historic nature of the Prop 8 fight—the first time in U.S. history a state has amended its constitution to TAKE AWAY people's civil rights—deserves a great documentary. This just isn't quite it.
8: The Mormon Proposition plays again:
Wednesday, Jan. 27 at 6 p.m. at the Tower Theatre in Salt Lake City
Friday, Jan. 29 at noon at the Temple Theatre, Park City
Saturday, Jan. 30 at 9 p.m. at the Screening Room at Sundance Resort
Visit the Sundance Web site for a complete schedule and ticket info
http://www.saltlakemagazine.com/Blo...undance-Film-Review-8-The-Mormon-Proposition/