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But how fascinating! Apparently, just before the story begins, Black has rescued White from a suicide attempt. Black is keeping White talking in his apartment, presumably so that White doesn't try again. As such, there is a subtext under laying everything that is going on. But that isn't nearly as neat as the actual words being said. Black talks a lot more than White, but they get into stuff such as books, including the Bible , and the afterlife, that are just plain gripping. I haven't seen a show that is so intense with such little action since In Treatment.
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A major component of the movie, taken from a play, is religion. Black is a devout Christian, converted during his time in prison serving a murder sentence. He lives a simple life devoted to Jesus. White is an intellectual aethist, shaped that way by his pursuit of academia (he is a college professor). But both are smart, and open to hearing the other, even though neither will be convinced of the other's opinions. Nor do either one descend into stereotype. They hold personally chosen values, not ones spouted by a religious leader that they embraced. Jackson and Jones make you believe what their characters believe, and neither viewpoint comes out looking better than the other.
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Article first published as TV Review: The Sunset Limited Far From It on Blogcritics.
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