Saturday, January 28, 2006

Brats: Our Journey Home

Where are you from? Umm...Somewhere, nowhere. How do you answer that question if you are a brat?

“Brats: Our Journey Home” is a feature length documentary about growing up as a kid in the armed forces. The documentary by Donna Musil tells a story about our unique hidden American subculture, but most importantly it tells us something about ourselves. It has interviews, commentaries, film clips, home movies clips, and still pictures to help tell the story. Kris Kristofferson, a brat himself, does an excellent job narrating and his music is heard several times during the documentary. General H. Norman Schwarzkopf, also a former brat, shares some of his insight and stories.

The heart of this documentary is the dozen or so “brat” interviews. When the “Brats” start telling their stories there is an instant connection because the experiences they share are the same as yours and mine. Almost all brats can relate to the stories of living on base, living oversea, moving all the time, losing friends, and then having to make new friends.

At first I thought “Brats: Our Journey Home” was a story made for telling the civilian world about what it was like growing up in the armed forces. After watching it however I believe it’s mainly a documentary for us "brats". Inserted between the brat interviews and stories are commentaries by author Mary Edwards Wertsch, psychotherapist Stephanie Donaldson-Pressman, and West Point sociologist Dr. Morten Ender. The commentaries from these individuals offered some eye opening insight on why we “Brats” are like we are – some good things and some not so good things.


The first time I watched this documentary I thought some of the brat stories seemed to be little bit on the negative or dark side. A couple of the brats mentioned that they had alcoholic parents, another brat tried to commit suicide four times as a teenager, and another brat told the story about how she was raped by a serviceman on base when she was a young girl. Were our families really that troubled or dysfunctional? After some self-reflection and recollection I accepted the fact that growing up as brat wasn’t all roses. Brats however are resilient and we move on. During the ending credits each of the individuals I mentioned above with the troubled childhoods are shown apparently leading successful and happy lives as adults.

This DVD is available for purchase at www.bratsourjourneyhome.com
I recommend this documentary; I think it’s good for the soul. You will probably need to watch it more that once to soak in all the information. I watched it three times in two days.


In this documentary it’s mentioned that since none of us really have a hometown, basically “hometown” to a brat is a "state of mind". I like to think that when brats get together at reunions, wherever that may be, we are home.

Order the DVD Now for $29.95

Monday, January 16, 2006

A Little Trip to Heaven in Iceland?

“A Little Trip to Heaven” is a movie directed by Icelandic director Baltasar Kormákur and stars Peter Coyote, Forest Whitaker, Jeremy Renner, and Julia Stiles

In this movie an insurance investigator HOLT (Whitaker) is sent to the small town of Hastings, Minnesota to try and piece together the mystery surrounding a dead body with a million-dollar life insurance policy, the beneficiary ISOLD (Stiles) who hides a mystifying past, and her strange husband FRED (Renner).

So what is so special about this movie other than it has an Icelandic director? Well for one the movie was shot almost entirely in Iceland but the main reason it's special is because part of the movie was shot at A.T. Mahan High School with 80 students from A.T. Mahan Elementary and A.T. Mahan High School participating as extras. If you watch the movie trailer closely you will get a glimpse Whitaker walking down the A.T. Mahan High School hall as the A.T. Mahan student extras transit between classes.

Does this look like Minnesota to you?


The movie hasn’t been distributed in the United States (yet) however it has been shown at the Toronto International Film Festival last September and it opened in Iceland theaters on December 26th, 2005. The movie will screen at the Sundance Film Festival, Jan 19-29, in Park City, Utah. Then general release in the U.S. is expected to follow.

The critic reviews are mixed however almost all of them mention that the movie is surreal, dissonant, but pretty. Wow --- Imagine that!

Links: See the Movie Trailer and other movie information here. Also make sure to check out the pictures Julia Stiles took in Iceland posted at her official website! She took some good pictures.