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This Sundance Festival sensation has attracted attention because of its jarring images of Amish kids immersed in debauchery: plain-dressed girls in white bonnets slugging back beers and flicking ashes from their cigarettes, boys passing out in the back of pickups after all-night parties, even Amish teens in bed together. But like a good drama, it's the characters themselves and their heartbreaking dilemma that linger in the mind. In the Amish vernacular, "Devil's Playground" refers to the "English" or outside world. The protected teens are suddenly thrust into this world upon their 16th birthday as they begin "Rumspringa," a period during which they decide whether to join the church as adults. Crystallizing this predicament is the 73-minute documentary's most compelling figure, 18-year-old Faron, a preacher's son fighting drug addiction. His earnest intent to return to the church and astonishing articulateness makes his misadventures in the drug underworld and penal system undeniably poignant. --Kimberly Heinrichs
Description
Devil's Playground explores the Amish ritual of Rumspringa, a coming-of-age "time for decision" presented to Amish youth when they must decide which path they will follow as adults... 16th century religious scripture or 21st century pleasure. "Sensitive, revealing and at times heart-wrenching." --Ad Crable, Lancaster New Era
Customer Reviews:
A Superb Video.......2007-09-16
A great way to spend a rainy afternoon! I love the Amish...reading about them, watching them and visiting them. This is a great quality video for a fair price and the delivery is super fast too!
Amish Youth On Rumspringa.......2007-09-15
This documentary explores the Amish ritual of Rumspringa. This is when Amish youth reach age 16 and are allowed to enter the "English world" and to experience all it's temptations such as drinking, drugs and sex.
The doc focuses on Faron, an Amish teen who's Rumpspringa experience has led him to become a meth addict who also deals drugs to pay for his habit. He gets busted but avoids jail time by turning evidence on some other local dealers. Obviously, this puts him in physical danger and he heads for the safety of life back home. Faron eventually leaves again to follow a girlfriend who has moved to Florida. There he succeeds in staying clean but faces setbacks in his attempts to "make it" in the outside world.
Velda is another teen that the doc features. She is an intelligent, independent young woman who has suffered from depression while growing up Amish. She comes across as a determined and inspirational figure who succeeds in getting into a college in Texas, a terrific accomplishment since Amish are not allowed to attend school beyond the 8th grade.
Nearly all the kids seem to be good hearted and I really found myself pulling for them. But I also ended up with some very mixed feelings about the adult Amish community. Of course, it's easy to feel a sort of romantic nostalgia for the simple country life they live, far away from the materialistic and competitive excesses of the modern world. But I do have a serious problem with the fact that they discontinue education at the 8th grade. This obviously leaves young minds underdeveloped and puts the kids at a severe disadvantage when it comes to suceeding in the outside world. Also the Amish are a very strict fundamentalist religious sect who teach their young people that they must remain Amish to enter Heaven. If they do choose to live in the "English world" they are dooming themselves to eternity in Hell. This sort of judgemental and punishment based religious theology I find extremely disturbing.
But the documentary itself is both tremendously educational and entertaining. Highly recommended!
Interesting documentary.......2007-06-12
"Devil's Playground" is about the rumspringa, a period in the life of Amish youth from 16 that lasts for months or years, when that youth can live as the "english" and experience life outside of the Amish culture. This documentary does a good job showing this surprising aspect of Amish life. "Devil's Playground" does not glamorize the life of the Amish, nor does it tear that life down; it simply tries to show it as it is. And you learn a few things - for example, I hadn't known that Amish kids have to leave school after 8th grade.
However, the narrative of the movie breaks down at times. It wasn't until I saw the deleted scenes that I realized that one of the teenage girls we saw in several of the clips was Velda, who we meet at 23. And the movie relies a bit too much on Faron. Yes, the idea of an Amish meth dealer is sensational, and a hook with which to market the movie, but in many ways Velda was far more the rebel and the individualist. (For a textbook example of the way speed messes people up, compare clean Faron with meth-addled Faron.)
The rumspringa perhaps explains why Amish culture has survived for so long. Young people are not forced into the religion, but rather must choose it for themselves. You have to fully buy in to the church in order to join; you don't simply drift into it. So, not only are rebels given a chance to escape, if you will, during rumspringa, those that remain have affirmatively chosen to be there.
Unless you are really, really interested in the Amish, a religious studies professor, or otherwise deeply engaged with the Amish culture and community, this is more of a rent than a buy. But it's at least worth a rent.
Boys will be boys.......2007-03-09
Being an English teacher in France and being interested in the Amish community, this documentary comes in very handy to show the dilema Amish teenagers face once they turn 16: to belong or not to belong to the community. This documentary surely throws some light on this radical decision-making time by focusing on different profiles, however I find that some scenes are rather long and repetitive. Besides, given the poor quality of the sound at times and the strong American accent, I think that English subtitles might help my French pupils...
enlightening expose on a relatively unknown sector of our population.......2007-01-21
I had no idea what these kids went through in growing up. This is an anthropological documentary that looks at the Amish culture and lifestyle. While many religious groups endorse some sort of "age of accountability" doctrine, the Amish have a specific age (16) that seems to be a high estimate for when human beings begin to consciously sin. Rumspringa is when an Amish adolescent at sixteen goes to experience the "English" world and, consequently, becomes lost. A part of the rumspringa experience is enjoying the luxuries of technology, but just as important to the adolescents, is enjoying the freedom of copulation and consumption of alcohol and drugs. Beyond the theological motifs, the movie raises a great many of ethical questions. For instance, if many of the Amish adolescents will not choose to join the Amish church, and thus be destined to heal, is it morally justifiable to release them out into the world? It seems that the sixteen-year-old Amish kids would benefit from being thoroughly proselytized and catechized at this age, rather than sent into an English world replete with distractions. A less "religious" but equally troubling ethical question consists in the moral culpability of the Amish parents for the condition of their children. One of the movie's subjects becomes addicted to drugs and begins to sell narcotics. If the Amish did not continue this tradition, these adolescents would not be pushed into such dangerous situations. As shocking as it was to see an American subculture so detached from the larger culture, it is even more shocking to see the film's final fact: the Old Order Amish church has a greater retention rate now than it did throughout much of the twentieth century. In conclusion, this movie can generate great intellectual discussions and should be seen by anyone who is interested in religious studies.
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Devils Playground
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ASIN: B000VQTUFY |
Product Description
Format: DVD
Display Format: Full Screen
Actors: John Frawley, Simon Burke, Charles McCallum, Jonathan Hardy, Thomas Keneally, Nick Tate, Peter Cox, John Diedrich, Arthur Dignam, Gerry Duggan
Director: Schepisi, Fred
Rating: NR
Movie Description
A powerful drama relating the intimate aspects of teenage boys and their priest/educators behind the walls of a religious institution where rigid discipline backfires, natural feelings are deemed unnatural acts, and human lives are controlled in the name of good intentions.
Average customer rating:
- What was it all about??
- Just bad.
- If you love boys, you will love Simon Burke in this film.
- The Devil's Playground
- "The body will not be denied."
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Devils Playground
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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Burke, Simon
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Cinis, Alan
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Tate, Nick
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Schepisi, Fred
| ( S )
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Customer Reviews:
What was it all about??.......2005-02-04
There really is no plot, the movie only message seems to be about body temptations (masturbation and sex) and it was pretty boring. Don't waste Your money.
Just bad........2004-10-13
I'm sorry but i found this to be perhaps one of the worst movies I have ever seen. Not only were the camera shots fuzzy and sound muffled, the plot of the story was TERRIBLE! It made absolutley no sense to me to follow this movie's trail. I just kept waiting, no WANTING IT TO END! Just bad.
If you love boys, you will love Simon Burke in this film........2004-06-16
The charming child actor Simon Burke does a remarkable job connecting with his audience in this film. The film is about adolescent sex play and developing boys during puberty while confined to an all boys boarding school. The school is opressive but the boys use creative way's to survive this and try to love their developing bodies as best they can. Tom Allen (Simon Burke) has a charm about his smile that will get you in the heart and he knows how to act as well. The film is very well made and does accurately portray life in boys boarding schools. The Australian version of boys boarding schools seems to be much more opressive than the Brithish version of the same type of environment, of course this is from an American public school reviewer who has read a lot about these things. Note that this film is not a dark portrayal of life nor is it exploitive of boys sexuality. The boy's seem to have a ruggedness about their sexual curiosity that withstands the abuse of the system in the school. Also note that this film does not portray any sexual activity between the staff and the boys, but the staff sure has a botched up attitude about their own bodies. You will love the film.
William.
The Devil's Playground.......2004-04-07
A good movie with a message.
I liked all the extras- Trailer & Photo gallery.
What in the world is the "viewer from europe" writing about when he says- bad copy with no extras. He must have a Bootlegged copy. I have a DVD and so does a friend.
Both are excellent.
"The body will not be denied.".......2003-07-22
UH-oh . . . a movie about male libido. You can run, you can hide . . . or you can go on a poignant journey with Fred Schepisi as he takes you on this semi-autobiographical tour of a Catholic seminary in Australia, circa the Fifties. The first problem to overcome, obviously, is the DVD's cover art: no, it's not about priests who prey on boys. The straight-and-squeamish out there may presume that the movie is primarily about gay issues, but they would be wrong. Schepisi's priests are all straight-shooters, overturning a generally cherished stereotype (the few scenes involving homosexuality occur between the students). Instead, *The Devil's Playground* is about sexuality itself, or, more specifically, the war between Dogma and Glands: both priests and students are caught in this grimly funny and exasperating struggle. Schepisi is most adamant about being fair to both sets of individuals. On the one hand, you have the monk who spends his rare night away from the seminary at the local watering hole, getting desperately drunk, and flirting with factory girls right up to the point when a one-night-stand seems imminent. ("I barely escaped!" he pants to his fellow-priest as they run out of the bar.) On the other hand, we see the adolescent students in various stages of terminal puberty: they goggle at pinups; they play sadomasochistic games at secret night assignations; they flirt with the local girls . . . all the while dealing with new hair under their pits, wet dreams, embarrassing confessions to their teachers, fury at God, and secret wishes to give up the vocation. It's pretty heavy going, particularly the case of the strictest priest in the seminary, who, made helpless by compulsion, spends his day away from the school at the local public swimming pool. After ogling the bathing-suited ladies, he absconds to the lavatory, shaking with self-loathing. (The fantasy this episode causes, later that night, has to be one of the most masterfully shot "dream sequences" I've seen.) Of course, there's also a lot of keen, rueful humor that brings much-needed perspective to this stifling atmosphere. Sex, after all, is pretty funny. But as much as Schepisi respects the men of the cloth (and the boys who aspire to the cloth), he never lets you forget where he comes down on the Catholic Church's war against physical desire: "The body will not be denied." [Trivia note: watch for Thomas Keneally, author of *Schindler's List*, playing the role of a visiting friar.]
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Devils Playground -
ProductGroup: DVD
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ASIN: B000LXCRX4 |
Product Description
Hardcore XXX
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- CUTE LITTLE CUBBYHOUSE
- For sale:Crumbling house with satanic cubbyhouse in backyard
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Hellion: The Devil's Playground [Region 2]
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ASIN: B00005RZRO |
Customer Reviews:
CUTE LITTLE CUBBYHOUSE.......2005-02-24
This Australian/American co-production was called CUBBYHOUSE in its Australian release, but since many Americans would never know what a cubbyhouse is, HELLION became its American title. At times cheesy and implausible, HELLION nevertheless has a few jolting moments, some videogame like effects and maintains an eerie atmospheric tension. Joshua Leonard (Blair Witch Project) plays the cocky, yet sometimes sensitive, teenager who finds himself in Australia when his mom divorces his dad and wants to start over in her homeland. They buy a rather rundown house, which happens to be the site of a murder by a deranged devil worshiper, who killed his brother's children, and is now festering in an insane asylum. The cubbyhouse (we'd call it a playhouse) is possessed by demonic forces out to possess the two children.
There's not a lot of originality in the movie, although the concept of the killer vines is fun. For a lower budget film, HELLION is entertaining.
For sale:Crumbling house with satanic cubbyhouse in backyard.......2004-08-01
One thing I loved about 80's horror were are all the cool occult flicks that were made. You know which ones I'm talking about, films like "Witchcraft", "Witchboard", "976-Evil", "The First Power". They just don't seem to make those types of horror films anymore. Imagine my surprise when I stumbled upon a film called "Hellion", about a backyard cubbyhouse overrun by the forces of Satan. Yee-haw, they do still make em' was my initial reaction. Then I started getting scared for three main reasons.
1. I am a horror junkie however I had never even heard a passing mention of this film.
2. Not a single review of the movie on Amazon
3. Selecting horror movies I've never heard of because they have a cool title and nifty cover art has proven a fatal mistake to me oh so many times.
Well I'm glad to say that "Hellion" was a nice little film that did not cause me any pain and as a matter of fact I enjoyed it quite a lot!
The story centers around the Graham family: single mom Lynn, her teenaged son Danny and two younger children Ivan and Natalie. After a messy divorce, Lynn decides to leave Santa Monica, California for her native country of Australia with her three American-born sons. They move into a crumbling old house on the Gold Coast. The house definitely needs work but one thing it has going for it is a huge backyard with a nice little cubbyhouse at the edge of the property. One day while visiting the town village, Danny is informed by one of the locals that the cubbyhouse in the yard is cursed with "pure evil" and that 30 years ago 2 kids were slayed by a devil worshipper in same said house. Danny dismisses this talk as nonsense until he starts noticing awfully strange things happening in that new backyard of his. Hmm maybe there's a good reason why the house was abandoned for so many years...
"Hellion" is an American-Australian co-production filmed in Oz with great scenic shots. At times I actually forgot it was an Aussie film since the bulk of the story surrounds the Grahams who obviously speak with American accents but there are several interesting supporting characters such as the cute girl next door who Danny is enamoured with, the long-haired town local who supplies the spook stories and a scuzzy real estate agent. On the downside, a few things about this film appeared pretty odd to me: A young brother and sister sharing the same bedroom. Danny supposedly grew up in California yet speaks with a Texas drawl. The person whose kids were killed 30 years ago doesn't look a day over 40. Oh well, what's a cheesy horror film good for when you can't find inconsistencies to poke fun at?
So why should someone bother watching "Hellion?" For one, the CGI effects are a sight to behold, not in terms of quality but because of how cheesy and creative they are. They had me staring in disbelief. It's filled with occult imagery like pentagrams, candles, satanic verses, people in red cloaks so if you like these types of things in your horror films look no further. And while it drags on occasion the finale is blistering and wraps the film up nicely. Don't let my relatively low star rating dissuade you from giving "Hellion" a try. I just don't want to pass it off as a great film (which it's not) but it's definitely worth a shot for the undiscriminating horror fan.
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Beat the Devil
Manufacturer: Digital Playground
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
ASIN: B000URD88Y
Release Date: 2003-08-12 |
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