“This place is about to get real wet!” Captain Pierce (Paul Logan) declares and he’s not kidding.
Remember how you always told yourself that you would do more to protect the environment and reduce your carbon footprint? Well, you didn’t and now the glaciers are melting at a record pace and the extra water is loosening up all of the Earth’s plates. We’re talking earthquakes and tsunamis! Dog and cats living together! Biblical proportions! Florida and Washington are already underwater! What can save the world? Massive sinkholes! But can the military and the scientists sink enough in two days to drain all the excess water? And will the main scientist’s wife and daughter ever get their car to work before the floods come in?
America Is Sinking deserves an award for its title but the rest of the movie is all wet. It’s low budget so there’s some cheap CGI and some stock footage but not enough to make us believe that America is actually sinking. Watch it to discover whatever happened to Michael Pare. (He ended up playing generals in movies like this.) Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich plays a Navy SEA. I guess they’ll let anyone join now.
A young man named Eric (Allen Williamson) enlists as a combat medic and is sent to Afghanistan. Eric truly thinks that he’s going to help to make the world a better place but, what he sees and experiences in Afghanistan, leaves him shaken and haunted by memories of the dead and wounded.
Upon returning home, Eric tries to keep himself busy helping his family’s winery recover from the latest round of California wildfires but he still finds himself tormented by his experiences. Suffering from PTSD, Eric discovers that his country is more than willing to send young men overseas to fight but it’s less willing to provide them with the support that they need when they return. With the help of his mother (Elizabeth Gast), his girlfriend (Cayla Black), and a fellow veteran (Stephen Wesley Green), Eric tries to find his place in the world.
Scars is an undeniably low-budget film. If you’re looking for a war film that is full of epic battle scenes and which will leave you feeling as if you actually are in the middle of Afghanistan, Scars is not the film to go with. Indeed, it took me a while to realize that Eric was in Afghanistan because Afghanistan looked exactly like California. As well, towards the end of the film, there’s a few moments of clumsy melodrama that feel as if they were added solely so that this rather talky film could be sold as a thriller.
But you know what? In the end, those flaws don’t matter. Scars is a heartfelt film, featuring an excellent lead performance from Allen Williamson, playing a man who is burdened by guilt but who never lets go of hope. Scars is a film about the pain that people carry with them and the struggle that men like Eric have when it comes to opening up about that pain. (Not all of the scars in the film are physical.) It’s an indictment of a society that, far too often, pushes the needs of veterans to the side. That’s especially true if that veteran served in an unpopular war, like the ones in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Considering that we still don’t know how many people were left behind when we left Afghanistan, Scars is a film that feels all too relevant.
And yes, Eric Roberts is in Scars. Playing a sympathetic doctor, he has about a minute of screentime towards the end of the film. It’s always a good idea to put your Eric Roberts cameo at the end of your movie, just to make sure that audiences stick around for the entire film.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed: