Easton's Article (2012)
68KEaston’s Article: Directed by Tim Connery. With Chad Meyer, Kristina Johnson, Dan Flannery, Benjamin Barlow. After receiving his future obituary via a cryptic Internet file, Easton Denning is forced to confront his troubled past in order to prevent his predicted demise.
“Michael Ryanu0026#39;s great review on this film: Posted on July 23, 2012 By Michael Ryan Fantasia Film Festival Eastonu0026#39;s Article Written and Directed by Tim Connery USA, 2012 u0026quot;Leave it to a time traveler to arrive late for a party! Eastonu0026#39;s Article arrives at the Fantasia Film Festival a year after films it would have been natural companion pieces with, like Fantasia 2011 films Brawler, Bellflower and Another Earth, films that used a thin veneer of genre to illuminate stories about the most f****d up personal relationships possible.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn the case of Eastonu0026#39;s Article, the genre is time travel and the veneer is very thin indeed. The filmu0026#39;s biggest weakness and biggest strength is that it is not really a time travel story at all. Oh sure, it has the trappings of a time travel story, but that is simply a mask for a story genre much older and darker than time travel.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe set-up for the film is that Easton Dunning (Chad Meyer) is a computer engineer who somehow manages to pull into his 1997 u0026quot;Super-Computeru0026quot; information from his own future, specifically his own obituary and a set of instructions. In investigating these artifacts from his future, Easton is drawn back to the hometown – and the girl, Hayley Reed (Kristina Johnson) he left behind years before. Eastonu0026#39;s bruised and alienated relationships with his hometown and Hayley are the heart of the picture. Easton clearly loves both Hayley and his hometown, but also fears them and fears opening the wounds that time and distance could not completely heal.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eEastonu0026#39;s Article is not a time travel story with physical time travel, nor is it the kind with a labyrinthine type plot like Robert A. Heinleinu0026#39;s classic By His Bootstraps or Shane Carruthu0026#39;s Primer. In fact for a time travel story, Eastonu0026#39;s Article is almost embarrassingly linear. It shares elements in common with films like Frequency and Cryptic or the James P. Hogan novel Thrice Upon A Time, by postulating that while people or objects canu0026#39;t travel through time, information can. The chief difference is that all three of those stories believe in a fluid time stream that can be changed as easily as shaking an Etch-A-Sketch, while Eastonu0026#39;s Article is more pessimistic about the ability to change oneu0026#39;s fate.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eFate is the key to the film. In a sense, when Easton ran away from his hometown, he sealed up his fate in a box like Schrödingeru0026#39;s cat and when he returns he begins the process of opening the box to see whether the cat lives or dies; to see what fate awaits him. Because you canu0026#39;t run from your destiny, the more violently you run away from it, the harder you run towards it. The ancient Greeks understood this well, just ask Oedipus (u0026quot;You will kill your father and marry your motheru0026quot;) or Croesus (u0026quot;If you cross the river, a great empire will be destroyedu0026quot;). The ancient Greeks would have understood and appreciated Eastonu0026#39;s Article, but not as a time travel story. They would have classified the film as a story about prophecy, and told us that it is not an accident that the Internet (especially in 1997) was/is home to both Oracle and Delphi.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBeneath the mask of the time travel story, Eastonu0026#39;s Article is revealed as a tale of prophecy, which are always stories about how our past leads to our future like the river leads to the sea.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu003culu003eu003cliu003eMike Ryanu0026quot; you canu0026#39;t run from your destiny no matter what. this film obviously is very low-budget film with only a few characters and actors to play it through, but itu0026#39;s not bad. i especially like Christina Johnson who played the Hailey role. she is a quite talented actress and played and acted this role very believable and convincing. this film, if you have some uncommitted time and patience, is quite watchable.u003c/liu003eu003c/ulu003e”