‘Ordinary Angels’ based on true story

Published 3:00 am Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Hilary Swank, left, and Alan Ritchson star in “Ordinary Angels.”

While the “faith-based film” has evolved over the years, there’s one tried-and-true formula this particular type of movie can’t quit: an improbable true story about a sick child in a perilous situation starring a popular actress (see: Jennifer Garner in “Miracles From Heaven”; Chrissy Metz in “Breakthrough”). In this kind of film, the drama remains focused on human kindness and community rather than specific beliefs.

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Religious organizations offer emotional and material support to the characters but mainly exist in the background, so the message is not overly preachy. But one would have to be a monster to resist the heartstrings-pulling power of a vulnerable child in a truly heinous scenario.

In “Ordinary Angels,” directed by Jon Gunn, the director of 2017’s “The Case for Christ” and producer of 2023’s “Jesus Revolution,” it’s faith in humanity that comes to the fore, though a church parking lot does play a pivotal role in this adaptation of the true story of young Michelle Schmitt, who was once known as the “Snow Baby of Louisville.”

But before we get to the snow, we’ve got to get to know hairdresser Sharon Stevens, played by two-time Oscar winner Hilary Swank. Stevens wrote a memoir titled “Ordinary Angels” about her life and about Michelle, and Kelly Fremon Craig (“Are You There God? It’s Me Margaret.”) and Meg Tilly wrote the screenplay. Though little Michelle’s incredible journey offers the climax of the movie, it’s Sharon’s redemption tale that offers the dramatic arc of the feature film.

We meet Sharon as she’s slamming down shots and dancing on a bar top in 1993 Louisville, Kentucky, where her hair is the only thing reaching for the heavens. After one too many nights of hard drinking, her friend Rose (Tamala Jones) dumps Sharon at an AA meeting, where sobriety doesn’t take, but the exhortation to “find a reason” does. While picking up a six-pack, Sharon notices a newspaper headline about a little girl who has lost her mother and desperately needs a liver transplant. She becomes obsessively, almost strangely fixated on how she can help Michelle Schmitt, showing up unannounced at her mother’s funeral service and bossily inserting herself into the young girl’s life, much to the consternation of Michelle’s stern roofer father Ed (Alan Ritchson).

Swank is doing a sort of “Erin Brockovich” thing here, powering through the world with big hair, higher heels and sheer audacity. For much of the film, you will simply be mystified as to why this woman is so taken with Michelle’s plight — her behavior is frankly odd and the character proudly has no boundaries.

The director goes for a gritty, dim look to give the film the air of authentic social realism. Cinematographer Maya Bankovic shoots hospital corridors in low light, criss-crossed with Venetian blinds, and honky-tonks are bathed in devilish red gels. There are some legitimately beautiful shots in the film: Ed silhouetted against the fading light as he works on a rooftop; the piercing of headlights through a blizzard.

Where “Ordinary Angels” stumbles is taking one unique human interest story from 1994 and making it instead the story of one woman, Sharon. The true story is an inspiring tale of community care and mutual aid, the kind of thing that feels rare, and rarely celebrated these days, but as usual, real life is more affecting, more nuanced, and yes, stranger than fiction.

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