Chances:_The_Women_of_Magdalene

<i>Chances: The Women of Magdalene</i>

Chances: The Women of Magdalene

2006 American film


Chances: The Women of Magdalene is a 2006 documentary film produced and directed by Tom Neff, and written by Neff and Barry Rubinow. The documentary features the socially conscious organization known as "Magdalene," located in Nashville, Tennessee. The system of recovery practiced at Magdalene is based on the twelve steps and twelve traditions of Narcotics Anonymous.

Quick Facts Chances: The Women of Magdalene, Directed by ...

Interviews

Critical reception

Variety magazine film critic Joe Leydon lauded the film, and wrote, "Inspiring uplift abounds in Chances: The Women of Magdalene, a slickly produced but unmistakably sincere docu about a femme Episcopalian priest's outreach program to rehabilitate Nashville prostitutes. Theatrical potential is limited, but pic could find appreciative auds through tube and nonprofit exposure...Pic touches briefly yet respectfully on Rev. Stevens' background and motivation -- she was sexually abused at an early age -- but focuses primarily on her program's clients, who prove remarkably candid while describing past ordeals and future plans. Feisty Clemmie Greenlee emerges as first among equals, and her response to tragedy provides one of the pic's many emotional highlights. High-def video lensing enhances the pic's intimacy."[1]

Nashville Scene film critic Jim Ridley gave the film a more mixed review, and wrote, "The women’s blunt personal stories form the most compelling parts of Tom Neff’s earnest, polished profile, which amounts to promotion for the program and its good works. As documentary, it’s limited: we see very little of the day-to-day life inside the shelters, while a project pairing Magdalene House residents with Music Row songwriters takes up too much of the movie’s focus—it comes as an intrusion when a son’s funeral turns into a music montage. But the Magdalene women interviewed on camera have fought for their second chances, and the hard-won hope on their faces can make you forgive a lot."[2]

Awards

Wins


References

  1. Leydon, Joe. Variety, film review, May 30, 2006. Last accessed: April 24, 2008.
  2. Ridley, Jim Archived 2008-02-13 at the Wayback Machine. Nashville Scene, film review, April 20, 2006. Last accessed: April 24, 2008.
  3. M&C News Archived 2007-08-22 at the Wayback Machine. Moview News, "Nashville Film Festival Winners," May 5, 2006. Last accessed: April 24, 2008.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Chances:_The_Women_of_Magdalene, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.