Mildly retarded killer Karl Childers (Thornton, making his feature directorial debut) is released from a mental hospital, where he was placed after killing his mother and her lover, after 25 years. Returning to his hometown, he befriends a boy (Black) with problems of his own. His mother is living with a mean, bullying drunkard (Yoakam, in a brilliant performance) who has no use for anyone, least of all mom's openly gay co-worker (Ritter). Thornton's excellent script moves at the slow pace of its hero, providing the superb cast plenty of opportunity to explore the rich characterization and dialogue. Filmed in Thornton's home state of Arkansas.
Character-driven, cross-generational appeal K-hill at 2008-03-10 17:12:55
Surprisingly appeals to a wide audience regardless of its R rating. The character-driven plot is great; acting is brilliant-- Yoakam is a special treat.
"Mmm-hmm," watch this film! PeanutButterJellyTime at 2008-03-10 13:39:45
Billy Bob's sensitive portrayal of Karl will stay with you, long after you finish your "taters" and "potted meat." With a stirring soundtrack by Daniel Lanois and an amazing supporting cast, Sling Blade is definitely a movie worth seeing.