I don't recall if I have mentioned my love of Hallmark's Love Comes Softly movie series before, but as much as I am in no way, shape, or form the target demographic for those films, I just truly enjoy them. It's a combination of my love for period films and for innocent love stories with kind men. These movies are very Christian, and although I'm pagan, it never makes me feel uncomfortable because the characters don't ever judge others that don't share their beliefs -- and they practice the loving, compassionate, non-judgmental type of Christianity that would actually make Christ proud.
These movies make me feel warm and good, and I periodically re-watch the series... and something struck me on my most recent re-watch a few days ago, and I want to talk about it.
So this film series is based on a book series by Janette Oke. I've only read the first book (and I loved it), but it's quite different than the first film... and from what I understand, the later movies are almost entirely different from the later books. The film I'm going to be focusing on today is the seventh in the series, and it's about Belinda, a young female doctor in a wild west town.
The reason I'm going to talk about this film, though it's not my favorite in the series, is because right now it really hits home. Dr. Belinda Simpson begins her medical practice in a town beset by an outbreak of Cholera, and a lot of the behavior we see from the townspeople (in this made for TV movie from 2009, set in 1850-something) mirrors behavior we are seeing NOW amidst the coronavirus pandemic.
Love Takes Wing reunites us with Belinda, now a practicing doctor and a recent widow. When we last saw her, she had just married a young lawyer named Drew Simpson and was preparing to begin studying to become a doctor. This is obviously several years later, and we have a new actress in the role (and she looks nothing like the previous actress -- but it's fine, the same thing happened with her mother and grandmother lol, it's fine... we accept it). She arrives at Sikestown (with her best friend Dr. Haylie Duff) and soon finds out about the outbreak of a mysterious illness. No one in town can agree upon what the illness is and what is causing it. No one understands how it is spread. The people are scared, and many of them are angry. Some of the townsfolk blame the orphanage on the outskirts of town... they think the orphans have caused the illness and are spreading it.
As the disease spreads more, Belinda and the woman who runs the orphanage (played wonderfully by Cloris Leachman) work overtime to care for the children and to try and figure out what is causing the disease to continue spreading. It's set at a time that not much was known about germs and bacteria, and we see a lot of Belinda having to explain this and certain hygiene and cleanliness best practices. When Belinda realizes that the illness the town is dealing with is cholera, the mayor attempts to control the narrative around the illness and doesn't believe her that his clean, upstanding town could be facing a disease that he insists "only" hurts the dirty and the poor. He doesn't want Belinda to let anyone know that she thinks the illness is cholera.
One of the angry townspeople is so insistent that the orphans are the cause of the illness that he campaigns for the orphanage to be shut down -- and when he doesn't get his way, he tries to set the orphanage on fire.
Belinda eventually figures out the root cause of the illness is a contaminated water source. Some people are thankful to have answers, but others still don't want to listen to her. She, a doctor, is not trusted as an expert because her expert information contradicts what some people are currently thinking... and it inconveniences them. People value their own righteous anger and their comfort and their current way of life over science and other people's safety and well-being.
But this is a movie. It's a fictional story, set in a world where one of the Backstreet Boys plays a saloon keeper and the sidebangs we were all rocking in 2009 are anachronistically rocked unapologetically in the mid to late 1800s. It ends happily. Many people died, but the illness ended shortly. None of the main characters died, and everyone ends the movie in a better place than where they started. Belinda is more content and confident in her medical prowess, she's remarried to a hot blacksmith, and she adopted a spunky little redheaded orphan.
But in the real world, in Covid-19's 2020, we don't know how this will end. We're not guaranteed a happy ending. We don't have a 90 minute runtime to tell us how long it'll last. We can't say for certain that "main characters" -- ourselves and the people we love -- won't be affected. If this continues the way it has been going, millions of people will die and every American will know people who were sick or died from this thing. Even people who recover will be affected for life. The orphans in this film had Belinda standing up for them, and the leader of the town eventually realized the error of his ways and tried to shut down the irrational hatred against the orphans, but Asian Americans haven't had a leader who stood up for them and did his part to stop irrational hatred against them for something that is OBVIOUSLY 100% not their fault.
I don't have all the answers. I just know that if we don't start listening to actual experts, if we don't continue staying home, this is going to get worse before it gets better. I want to see it start getting better, and I need people to care more about human lives than they care about the fact that they want a haircut. All everyone wants is for this to end soon and with as little damage as possible... so many people have had to suffer this painful illness. So many people have died and had to be buried in a mass grave because of it. Medical professionals are being traumatized by what they're having to see and the conditions they have to work under. They and all other essential workers are putting their own lives at risk every single day -- because they don't have a choice. We can ease that somewhat by doing something as fucking simple and easy and just staying home. Being quarantined is not easy, even for someone as deeply introverted as myself, but we are not being asked to do something impossible. Just please do your part. Please think of others.
Please watch the Love Comes Softly series -- maybe it'll teach you a thing or two about caring for other people (and just maybe you'll enjoy it, lol). As for myself, this seventh movie that I've kinda slept on is definitely one I'll be looking forward to much more in my next re-watch.
Friday, April 24, 2020
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