Sex scenes, sexual references and themes
| Director: | Ben Lewin |
| Actors: | John Hawkes, Helen Hunt, William H. Macy, Moon Bloodgood, W. Earl Brown, Adam Arkin, Annika Marks |
Based on the autobiographical writings of Berkeley, California–based journalist and poet Mark O’Brien, The Sessions chronicles his attempt to transcend the limbo between childhood and adulthood, in which he is literally trapped. With the blessing of an unusual priest and support from enlightened caregivers, the poignantly optimistic and always droll O’Brien swallows his fear and hires a sex surrogate. What transpires over a handful of sessions transforms them both.
| Status: | Normal |
|---|---|
| Run time: | 95mins |
| Origin: | UNITED STATES |
| Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |
The Sessions is a tender, well-intentioned examination of a disabled man exploring his sexual identity, but sometimes a film needs more than just good intentions. Australian writer-director Ben Lewin delivers his first movie in 18 years and while it's clear this is a very personal and important story for him to tell, the picture is ultimately too deferential to its central character and unwilling to bring any significant dramatic conflict into play. The Sessions is based on the true story of Mark O'Brien (John Hawkes), who lives his life paralysed from the neck down after being struck with polio as a child. O'Brien still has complete sensation over his body and spends much of his time in an iron lung. At the age of 38, O'Brien vowed to finally lose his virginity, hiring a 'sex surrogate' ...
The Sessions is a tender, well-intentioned examination of a disabled man exploring his sexual identity, but sometimes a film needs more than just good intentions. Australian writer-director Ben Lewin delivers his first movie in 18 years and while it's clear this is a very personal and important story for him to tell, the picture is ultimately too deferential to its central character and unwilling to bring any significant dramatic conflict into play.
The Sessions is based on the true story of Mark O'Brien (John Hawkes), who lives his life paralysed from the neck down after being struck with polio as a child. O'Brien still has complete sensation over his body and spends much of his time in an iron lung. At the age of 38, O'Brien vowed to finally lose his virginity, hiring a 'sex surrogate' (Helen Hunt) to assist him in this journey.
Lewin, having suffered through polio himself, obviously empathises greatly with O'Brien's story and Hawkes' performance is charmingly gentle. Unfortunately, this sensitivity ends up being the film's great weakness and The Sessions resembles a eulogy where no one dares say a bad word about the deceased. This results in a frustratingly vanilla portrait of O'Brien as an affable, wise-cracking cripple that everyone ends up falling in love with. Even his solitary moments are simply a guy in an iron lung making jokes with his cat.
Despite the one-dimensional simplicity of these moments, the frankness of the actual 'sessions' is refreshing. These sequences (played bravely by Helen Hunt and Hawkes) are some of the most candidly sexual moments I've yet seen in an American feature. Strangely enough, Hunt played an similar role – to much greater effect – 20 years ago with Eric Stoltz in The Waterdance.
The Sessions is sure to be warmly received by audiences upon release but those seeking a serious insight into these issues should look elsewhere. The Sessions is a strangely bland combination of feel-good drama and sexual bluntness that is exasperatingly slight.
2.5/5