Saints are key to these families, especially to the youngest of the sisters, the equally aptly named Dolores (Lily Knight), who maintains an upward countenance despite the sorrowful fate of being in her mother's womb during a nasty fall, which has rendered her forever childlike. Christine, who possibly caused her mother to trip, now shoulders the guilt for her sister's condition, in addition to struggling with her emotionally aloof, workaholic husband, Paul (Jamey Sheridan). Throughout, it's Grace who fights for balance, introducing Dolores to the saints--Christopher in the car, Francis for the animals, Cecilia for music, and so on--while juggling her uppity sons and her own husband, who couldn't find his butt with both hands.
Rather than laying out yet another exposé about deranged and neurotic Middle Americans, DeSalvo goes easy on her characters, which may be jarring for some. Nobody here is on junk, nobody's packing, and--given the Catholic overtones of the project--there isn't even an unwanted pregnancy to sort out. Fortunately, the secular Catholicism on display here--defined, somewhat confoundingly, as "universality," "liberalism," or "wholeness"--represents hopefulness within a terribly tarnished regime. These Amati girls are regular people. They didn't invent their religion; they're just trying to work with it.
It's actually stunning how much we experience with these people in a breezy 91 minutes, to DeSalvo's credit. Entire films could be based around each sister's plight: Denise's starry eyed self-deception in the face of true love (as a stern and serious Mark Harmon observes her "following one rainbow after another"); Grace's dutiful sadness as she assists her death-obsessed mother, shopping for a casket to match her ensemble; Dolores' lonely, frenzied desire to find herself a "top" (a term which dissolves about half of Gloria Steinem's work in one fell swoop); and, perhaps most poignantly, the hopes--dashed and rebuilt--of Christine and her young daughter. A dance recital in which steadfast fathers attend and lift their daughters adds much mirth to the piece, as well as much poignancy.
DeSalvo's movie definitely wears its cultural credos upon its sleeve--divorce, for example, is cause for collective browbeating, as is chasing one's whimsical dreams--but it also exudes a warmth that's far from stuffy. Whether the actresses are bickering, with aplomb, about whether they're living in "Sicily in 1525," or Sorvino's extremely average Joe is picking on Denise's boyfriend, Lawrence ("Why can't she call him Larry, like a normal person? He needs a whole name?"), the dialogue rings with funny truths. Amid all the requisite forgivenesses and reconciliations, there's even a deliciously dark sense of irony afoot.
Still, there are simply some unfortunate choices made throughout. Much like The Contender, the ambition of the project is blighted by an exceedingly heavy-handed score, here by Conrad Pope, assisted by music supervisor Steven Corn's syrup. Although DeSalvo performs the miracle of making these characters seem like people we actually know, occasionally her delivery definitely makes us wish we didn't. It's curious that she could craft this study of happy compromise without realizing her own unnecessary sacrifices in the process.