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Susan Granger's review of "THE BASKET" (North by Northwest Entertainment)
The impact of regional film-making is growing and this independent "family film" is one of the best to emerge in recent years. Working with three friends, film-maker Rich Cowan has created a character-driven, intriguing tale of opera and basketball, nostalgia and history, love and war set amid the rolling wheat fields of Washington State. His company, North by Northwest, raised the $3 million budget for the period drama, set in the rural town of Waterville in the midst of World War I. The story begins as a pastor/physician welcomes two German war orphans, 12 year-old Helmut (Robert Karl Burke) and his 17 year-old sister, Brigitta (Amber Willenborg), into his home. At the same time, a new school teacher named Martin Conlon (Peter Coyote) arrives from Boston, bringing with him phonograph records of an evocative German opera called "The Basket" about a stranger who saves a town that is threatened by barbarians at the gates. The plot of the opera obviously parallels the suspicion, prejudice and intolerance of Waterville's citizens, much to the dismay of a sympathetic farmer's wife (Karen Allen) who bears her own wartime tragedy. "Why are you teaching the children a German opera when we are at war with them?" she asks. Conlon also introduces a then-new sport called "basketball" with its emphasis on teamwork, saying: "To defend a mighty wall, each one must fight for something small." Ultimately, Waterville challenges Spokane's experienced team for money - which will allow the farmers to buy the new thresher that they desperately need for harvest season. Despite its slow-pacing, on the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "The Basket" is a warm, heartfelt, uplifting 7. It's a gem, one of those rare, thoughtful, beautiful movies with a feeling of "A River Runs Through It."
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