海角大神

海角大神 / Text

鈥楳ass鈥 filmmaker explores forgiveness and reconciliation after tragedy

In an effort to understand the reasons for and effect of mass shootings, Fran Kranz wrote and directed the new movie 鈥淢ass,鈥 which offers lessons for a divided world.

By Gregory Wakeman , Correspondent

Fran Kranz had a young child at home in 2018 when 17 people were killed by a gunman at听Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

The veteran actor couldn鈥檛 let go of that event 鈥 or the idea of how to forgive in the face of it.听

鈥淚 was a new parent when the Parkland shooting happened. ... I was so upset, horrified, and angered. I just wanted to learn more,鈥 says Mr. Kranz in a phone interview. 鈥淪o I started doing research. I felt like I needed to because these things were affecting me differently now that I had a child.鈥

The result of that journey is 鈥淢ass,鈥 Mr. Kranz鈥檚 debut as a writer-director. It sees couple Jay (Jason Isaacs) and Gail (Martha Plimpton), whose son died in a school shooting, come face to face with Richard (Reed Birney) and Linda (Ann Dowd), the parents of the perpetrator, years later.听For almost two hours, the quartet talk, scream, and cry as they relive the tragedy, offering viewers a cathartic experience that will leave them thinking about grief and reconciling for hours after the credits have rolled.听

Prior to researching mass shootings, Mr. Kranz had beenfascinated by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa 鈥 which between 1996 and 2003 aimed to heal the country by uncovering human rights violations during apartheid. Eventually, his focus on听forgiveness and reconciliation morphed听into a script. As he wrote, he began to wonder how he would react if his child were caught up in such a tragedy.

鈥淲hat would I do? How would I handle this? Could I face these people? Could I forgive them? How do you move forward? These were all things that I just needed to know about myself,鈥 he says. 鈥溾楳ass鈥 is a meditation on all of that. It is me wanting to believe in forgiveness and wanting to believe in reconciliation. But not knowing how to get there.鈥

Mr. Kranz met with charities and groups, including Moms Demand Action, as well as parents of victims. He read every book and article about mass shootings he could find and watched documentaries, all so he could try to figure out how they have become so frequent. Ultimately, though, he became more and more focused on getting to know the people, the families, the children, and the teachers who had been involved.听

鈥淭hat was the most important story I could tell 鈥 the people affected and the lives they鈥檙e living now. That was really all that mattered,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 go back and change the past. But how do we promote a better future? How do we promote positive change?鈥

To achieve this, the filmmaker wanted to look at the aftermath of a school shooting from a different perspective. That鈥檚 why he set 鈥淢ass鈥 several years after the cataclysmic incident.

鈥淚 feel like it鈥檚 easier for us to move on with our lives when the media stops covering something. I wanted to see these people years later,鈥 he says. 鈥淭o show just how lasting the effects are. My hope is that it pays a new kind of attention to the subject, in an effort to promote more positive change.鈥

Deborah Carr, a professor of sociology at Boston University, says that even though this sort of meeting typically听wouldn鈥檛 be advised by professionals, there are potential positives to it.听

She acknowledges the risks involved, as the family of the victim might not get the answers that they鈥檙e looking for. 鈥淏ut it could go really well. It could be a case whereby both families speak their piece,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey grow to understand each other and become empathetic. They might come away, not necessarily with closure, because there is the belief that closure isn鈥檛 possible when you lose a child, but it might at least lead to understanding.鈥

Like Dr. Carr, Rachel Brandoff, an assistant professor and coordinator of the art-therapy concentration at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, is intrigued by the premise of 鈥淢ass鈥 and the results that it could produce. In particular, she notes, it鈥檚 sometimes forgotten that both sets of parents are grieving the loss of their child.听

鈥淭he art of being a parent is not just seeing your child for who they are now in this moment, but imagining who your child can become and all of the wonderful things that you hope will be in their future. Both families lost that,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o there is potential to share grief, if the families can get past the unique circumstances of feeling like they lost their son as the fault of another.鈥

Even though 鈥淢ass鈥 is set in a church, the writer-director says that he came up with the title for its secular meaning, 鈥渢hat of just people gathering together, the assembling of bodies,鈥 he explains. Mr. Kranz, who was raised as a 海角大神 but no longer practices, more than welcomes discussions about its religious themes, though.

鈥淚 want the audience to walk out asking about their own relationship with spirituality,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 healthy and important to have a relationship with the unknown and some kind of symbol that is outside of yourself. Because I think accepting that and exploring it leads to humility, which leads to interdependence.鈥

He doesn鈥檛 know if 鈥淢ass鈥 actually offers concrete 鈥渟olutions or explanations鈥 for how communities, families, and survivors can try to heal from similar tragedies. He just wants viewers to realize that, while grief may not go away, you can certainly 鈥渓ive with it differently鈥 and 鈥渄on鈥檛 have to be at war with it.鈥澨

Another of his aims is for 鈥淢ass鈥 to encourage those who watch it to try to heal the huge divide that currently separatesswaths of the United States. Like the four parents, he wants to see more people with different opinions come together to listen, empathize, and connect with one another.听

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have the authority or experience to craft how we could do that in this country,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t just feels so urgent and necessary to be able to talk, to be able to heal, and to be able to recognize a sort of shared common humanity so we can move forward. Because I worry if we can鈥檛 do that, if we just want to be at odds with one another, I don鈥檛 know where to find hope in a world that wants us to remain antagonists.鈥

鈥淢ass鈥 is available in theaters on a rolling basis starting Oct. 8. It is rated PG-13 for thematic content and brief strong language.