My Name Is Bill W. (1989)
Facts
| Directed by | Daniel Petrie |
| Cast | James Woods, JoBeth Williams, James Garner, Gary Sinise and George Coe |
| Theatrical Release | April 30, 1989 |
| Video Release | September 2, 1997 |
| Running Time | 100 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 085391337133 |
| Buy this item ... | 3 new from $28.99, 16 used from $9.99, 1 collectible from $21.95 |
About My Name Is Bill W.
Here's another example of TV giving James Woods the chance to stretch out from the intense-psycho roles he seems restricted to in too many of his movies. In My Name Is Bill W. he plays Bill Wilson, the overreaching businessman from the Roaring '20s who went on to found Alcoholics Anonymous. Woods gets plenty of chances to stretch out here in Bill's headlong slide to the bottom, through the terrors of the Wall Street crash (which amplifies a two-fisted drinking problem) and into the loss of everything he holds dear. Yet Woods also is convincing as the man who understands just how insidious his disease is and learns to try to take everything one day at a time. He receives strong support from James Garner as the alcoholic physician who teams with Bill to make AA a viable proposition. --Marshall Fine Amazon.com
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Inspirational and Entertaining |
| My Name is Bill W |
| Awsome !!!! |
October 22, 2008
| AA |
| Not Only a Great Film, But a Story of an Important Spiritual Movement |
But there's a lot more to learn in exploring the roots of Alcoholics Anonymous. Once thought of as isolated from the realm of religion -- scholars of religious movements now regard the founding of AA with its reliance on a "Higher Power" as a major milestone in the evolution of American spiritual movements. This is especially true in newer books like Phyllis Tickle's "Great Emergence, The: How Christianity Is Changing and Why (emersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith)" Tickle argues that "AA opened the floodgates to spirituality by removing the confines of organized religion."
Think about its influence for a moment. Here is a massive national network formed around essentially spiritual principles that cut across religious boundaries -- and even manages to include non-religious people who define "Higher Power" in other ways. The movement was founded and grew with great success -- not as a branch of some traditional religious group -- but as a new way of bringing people together and organizing their reflections.
The movie's a great discussion-starter for groups. September 24, 2008
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