Tinnily acted and spasmodically edited, this new Jay Craven (Where the
Rivers Flow North) film still doesn't know what it wants to be when it
grows up. Set in 1952, the story about a young Canadian woman lured to Kingdom
County, Vermont, by a fake personals ad only to meet her bloody demise is not
quite a love story, not really a comedy, and not by any means a courtroom
drama, though it tries to be all three. Newcomer Jordan Bayne is Claire, a
Quebec native with "moxie" that endears her to almost every male in Kingdom and
an accent that flits from French to Swedish to Eskimo. Claire ends up staying
at the home of the film's other "stranger": a new preacher who shocks the town
by being black. Ernie Hudson brings a jolt of life to the screen as the
cigarette-smoking, gun-toting minister and the only character who doesn't
appear to be reading from a TelePrompTer. Maybe that's why the town's
two-dimensional folk -- and the smarmy big-time lawyer played by a bored Martin
Sheen -- immediately suspect him when Claire is found shot dead. Adapted from
Howard Frank Mosher's novel, the film's ill-paced storyline and cliché'd
dialogue ensure that no viewer will ever know what the hell is going on. But
the landscape sure is pretty.
--Jumana Farouky
Full Length Reviews
A Stranger in the Kingdom 
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