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Film

Film review: Finding the Way Back

Linda Marric is left disappointed by this tale of sport and redemption

July 10, 2020 13:56
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1 min read

It’s no secret that life hasn’t been a bed of roses of late for former Hollywood heartthrob Ben Affleck. With a well documented divorce from Jennifer Garner and subsequent problems with alcohol addiction, Affleck’s career seemed a long way away from its Good Will Hunting (1997) and Argo (2012) succeses.  To add to his long list of problems, even his short stint as the superhero Batman was met with a complete lack of interest from DC fans who never quite warmed to him in the role.

Channelling his own issues, Affleck is finally back on our screens starring in Gavin O’Connor’s Finding The Way Back. It in, OConnor (The Accountant)  and screenwriter Brad Ingelsby tell a story of redemption through the power of faith in a film which, sadly for all involved, lacks originality and structure.

Back in high school, Jack Cunningham (Affleck) was a star basketball player with the world at his feet. Today however Jack is a divorced blue-collar worker whose drinking habit has been spiralling out of control after a recent tragedy. Things start to look up for Jack when he is called upon by Father Edward Devine (John Aylward) the dean of his alma mater to take over as coach for the school’s down on its luck basketball team.

Despite his initial reluctance to accept the job, Jack soon finds an outlet to harness his anger at the world and everyone in it.  Meanwhile, Jack’s ex wife Angela (Janina Gavankar) informs him that she has a new man in her life, forcing him to look inwardly at his own life and continued destructive trajectory.