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Ticket to Heaven

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1981 Canadian film
Ticket to Heaven
DVD cover
Directed byRalph L. Thomas
Written byJosh Freed
Anne Cameron
Ralph L. Thomas
Produced byAlan Simmonds
Vivienne Leebosh
Ronald Cohen
Starring
CinematographyRichard Leiterman
Edited byRon Wisman
Music byMicky Erbe
Maribeth Solomon
Distributed byMiracle Films Ltd (Canada),United Artists (US and other nations)
Release dates
Running time
109 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
BudgetC$4,500,000[1]

Ticket to Heaven is a 1981 Canadiandrama film directed byRalph L. Thomas and starringNick Mancuso,Saul Rubinek,Meg Foster,Kim Cattrall, andR.H. Thomson. The plot concerns the recruiting of a man into a group portrayed to be areligious cult, and his life in the group until forcibly extracted by his family and friends. The film is based on thenonfiction bookMoonwebs byJosh Freed.

Plot

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Following a relationship breakup, David Kappel, a twentysomething school teacher, visits what turns out to be a training camp for areligious cult. At the camp, everything is done in groups, including chanting and singing. There is also alow-calorie,low-protein diet;sleep deprivation; and constantpositive reinforcement.[2]

All of the elements of the camp begin to have an effect on David mentally. He graduates and is put to work as a volunteer laborer for the cult. In an especially powerful scene, he vomits up ahamburger andmilkshake which he had just eaten in violation of cult dietary guidelines.[3]

David sets out to work, led by cult leader Patrick. David is shocked when Patrick lies to a customer, but Patrick explains that they are only "using Satan's methods to do God's work", and that it is okay because "it's only Satan's money we're taking."[3]

David's best friend Larry and his parents, Morley and Esther, are concerned about him. Larry visits the cult's camp and almost falls under their influence as well. He escapes with the help of Eric, a fellow camp attendee who befriends him. The latter reveals he has been visiting various cult camps, trying to find his sister. Once free, Larry returns home.

David's parents, Larry, Eric, and some other friends forcibly kidnap David, bringing him to a private home in the area and enlisting the aid of a cultdeprogrammer, Linc Strunk, to help him regain his normal mindset. After some struggle, David slowly comes to recognize the cult's dishonesty and mistreatment. He is confused and when he asks about "true love", he is told that he only needs to look around him: at Larry, his brother Danny, Sarah, his parents, and everything they've done for him, and still are enduring for him. Crying, he embraces them all. Everyone reunites and embraces outside the deprogramming house, while several cult members watch from a distance.

Cast

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Reception

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Critical response

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The film was selected as one of the top ten films of 1981 by theNational Board of Review of Motion Pictures.[citation needed] Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half out of four stars, but added that the ending was less interesting and powerful than the earlier cult indoctrination scenes.[2] Janet Maslin ofThe New York Times called it "an absorbing, frightening, entirely believable movie, which is particularly amazing in view of its subject matter."[3]

On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 78%, based on reviews from 9 critics.[4]

Accolades

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Ticket to Heaven was nominated for fourteen 1982Genie Awards, and won four :

YearAwardCategoryRecipientsResult
1982Genie Awards
Best Motion PictureRonald I. Cohen, Vivienne LeeboshWon
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading RoleNick MancusoWon
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting RoleSaul RubinekWon
Best Achievement in Film EditingRon WismanWon
Best Achievement in DirectionRalph L. ThomasNominated
Best Achievement in Music ScoreMicky Erbe,Maribeth SolomonNominated
Best Achievement in Overall SoundMarc Chiasson, Bruce Carwardine, Glen GauthierNominated
Best Achievement in Sound EditingMarc Chiasson, Glen Gauthier, Don White, David Appleby, Bruce CarwardineNominated
Best Performance by a Foreign ActorGuy BoydNominated
Best Performance by a Foreign ActressMeg FosterNominated
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting RoleR.H. ThomsonNominated
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading RoleKim CattrallNominated
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting RoleDixie SeatleNominated
Best Screenplay Adapted from Another MediumRalph L. Thomas,Anne CameronNominated

See also

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References

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  1. ^Staff."Box office business for Ticket to Heaven (1981)".IMDb. Retrieved2007-11-23.
  2. ^abEbert, Roger (January 1, 1981)."Ticket to Heaven, Review".Chicago Sun-Times. rogerebert.suntimes.com. Retrieved2007-11-23.
  3. ^abcMaslin, Janet (November 13, 1981)."'Ticket to Heaven,' A Sleeper About Cults".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-12-12.
  4. ^"Ticket to Heaven".Rotten Tomatoes.

External links

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Canadian Film Awards
1949–1975: Film of the Year
Canadian Film Awards
1964–1978: Feature Film
Genie Awards
1980–2011
Canadian Screen Awards
2012–present
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