
Just for the hell of it, I went on a little Robert Duvall marathon for his birthday on January 5th. I started the marathon off with his superior western with Kevin Costner, OPEN RANGE (2003). Next up was Duvall’s excellent crime film with Joe Don Baker and Robert Ryan, THE OUTFIT (1973). Duvall was in badass mode in this one. Based on one of Richard Stark’s “Parker” books, this was my first time to watch the film and damn, it was excellent. After that, I watched the bleak THE ROAD (2009), starring Viggo Mortensen, where Duvall just had a small part. It was a downer. I finished off the marathon late in the evening with A FAMILY THING (1996). I remember when this movie came out in the 1990’s because it was co-written by Billy Bob Thornton. Thornton was still a year away from his massive success with the movie SLING BLADE, but I knew him from his writing and co-starring in the superior crime film ONE FALSE MOVE (1991), as well as his small role in TOMBSTONE (1993). As an Arkansan, I knew Thornton was from Arkansas so I had taken a particular interest in him. But I was only 22 years old when A FAMILY THING was released, and a movie about a couple of old guys resolving family issues didn’t seem that appealing to me. As a guy into his 50’s, the entire concept seems more interesting to me now, so I gave it a spin for the first time to close out the marathon.
The story opens up in rural Arkansas with Earl Pilcher Jr. (Robert Duvall) getting the shock of his life when his beloved mother writes a final letter to him and instructs her local pastor to deliver it a few days after her death. The letter tells Earl that his biological mother was a black woman named Willa Mae who died in childbirth. It seems that Earl’s dad had gotten Willa Mae pregnant, and since he came out white, his “mother” was able to raise him as her own without having to tell him the truth. The letter also tells him that he has a half-brother named Ray Murdock (James Earl Jones) living in Chicago. It’s her dying wish that he meet Ray and get to know him as family. Pissed at his dad, and wanting to honor his mom, Earl heads to Chicago to meet Ray. Earl knows that Ray is a cop so he’s able to track him down. They immediately don’t like each other, but through a variety of circumstances, Earl ends up staying at Ray’s house for a couple of days. While there, he meets Ray’s wise, old Aunt T., Willa Mae’s sister (Irma P. Hall) and his sullen son Virgil (Michael Beach). Will the two men continue to push each other away, or will they eventually find the family connection that exists under all that messy past?
I was surprised how deeply I was affected by A FAMILY THING. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t get teary-eyed a couple of times. The movie may use issues of adultery and racism to get the ball rolling, but more than anything else, it seems to understand that life is messy and that people are messy. We’ll disappoint ourselves, we’ll disappoint other people, and other people will disappoint us. There’s a reason that many people find their love in dogs and cats instead of people, because real relationships can be tough. The truth about my own life is that I could not have appreciated this film in 1996 at only 22 years of age. I was too naive. That’s no longer the case in 2025, and I can now truly relate to this story of two men who share a painful history, find common ground, and decide it’s worth moving forward together because family really does matter.
A movie like A FAMILY THING has no chance of working without a great cast, and this movie is a thespian jackpot. Robert Duvall is spot on perfect as the good ole guy from Arkansas, with a little bit of a racism engrained down deep into his soul, who now has to deal with the fact that he is half black. The scene where he confronts his dad about the lies that had been told to him all his life is as good as it gets. James Earl Jones matches Duvall in the even trickier role as the man who has always known about his “white” half brother Earl. This man has buried his hatred away for Earl’s father for decades, who he blames for the death of his own mother, and now has to deal with those feelings being dredged back up to the surface when Earl shows up in Chicago. Jones perfectly balances his character’s desire to keep the past in the past, with his decency as a man who doesn’t want to just throw Earl out on the street. He eventually softens towards him no matter how much bitterness he has for Earl’s dad. And neither Duvall or Jones even give the best performance in the film. That honor goes to Irma P. Hall as the blind, but extremely perceptive Aunt T. She sees through all of their bullshit, as she states to each of them on different occasions, and encourages them to get to know each other because they’re family. As they play games of racism and bitterness, she reminds them they are brothers no matter the color of their skin. It’s the performance of a lifetime and was at least worthy of an Oscar nomination in my opinion.
Overall, A FAMILY THING may compress the amount of time and potential therapy it would take to resolve the type of family history presented here, but it does find a certain truth in the power of relationships. Earl and Ray don’t have to recognize the fact that they are brothers. As a matter of fact their lives are just fine without each other. But it’s their willingness to embrace the messy truth and find a way to connect with each other that makes the movie meaningful to me!

Here’s the trailer for A FAMILY THING.
This movie was great! I remember lining up the common ‘screenwriter is Billy Bob Thornton’ thing with the movies mentioned, and one more DON’T LOOK BACK (1996) with Eric Stoltz. Have an awareness of Thornton’s music, and really appreciate him giving Dwight Yoakam a shot at acting. Well, the line that stayed in my mind from A FAMILY THING was Duvall’s counsel, “a man needs two things in life, something to do and something to look forward to.” That line really resonated with me, as it hit in a time in my life that the message was needed!
Also, Brad you have observed “Jeff Nichols” and his film work, and just in case I wanted to point you to Jeff Nichols Writing Original Script Beside Cormac McCarthy Adaptation I take your point about ‘The Road’ being a ‘downer’, but if I may point out that I thought both book-and-movie did a great job of symbolizing the struggle for fathers to guide and protect children, as long as they can. “The ocean” is a symbol for both the end of life, but also the new beginning for the child, blah, blah, blah. The point of 4X Academy Award winner “NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN” (2007) is that ‘sometimes evil wins’, also a downer. But true, just like THE ROAD. I also take your point that movies/books/stories hit a little differently, as we all age and squeeze through life like the “pig-in-the-python!”:-)
Thanks again for a very worthwhile read on this movie, Brad!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I have never watched DON’T LOOK BACK, but I am aware of the film. I should probably watch it at some point. And that line about “something to do” really hit home with me. I actually started writing about all these movies recently to give me something to do. With our daughter recently out of the house, and the hustle and bustle that goes with that almost completely gone, I really needed something positive to fill all of that time with. So here we are.
And thanks so much for the update on Nichols. It was such an honor meeting him here in Arkansas when he presented his film THE BIKERIDERS at our local cinema society. The thought of him adapting McCarthy’s work, and his promise that he is working on another original script to be set here in Arkansas, are firing me up! And thanks for that additional insight into THE ROAD. I can definitely see what you’re saying. NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN is quite simply one of the all-time great movies.
I truly was not expecting A FAMILY THING to make as much of an impact on me as it did, but I’m still thinking about it many days after I watched the film. It just seemed to be what I needed right now.
LikeLiked by 1 person