Synopsis
Philippe Caland directs and stars in this karmic drama about a hip, new age clothing designer from Lebanon who attempts to engineer redemption after realizing that a mistake from his past may have destroyed his entire future. Amer Atrash (Caland) is a first generation immigrant who's perpetually on the verge of the American Dream. But despite his repeated attempts to achieve financial success, it seems that complications always arise at the eleventh hour that set him directly back to square one. Now, after years of struggling, Amer is set to debut a cutting edge clothing line that could put him on top of the world. When the rug is pulled out from under Amer's feet once again, his efforts to hustle his way through the predicament ultimately amount to naught. Later, when Amer's wife Sherry (Virginia Madsen) admits that she's been feeling neglected and needs time to decide whether it's worth working to save their marriage, the dejected designer tells her a secret that he's never revealed to another living soul. Fifteen years earlier, Amer was involved in an accident that left a man named Phillip Blackman (Forest Whitaker) wheelchair bound. Could it be that all of Amer's current life problems somehow stem back to that one fateful night? Upon hearing Amer's story, Sherry encourages her husband to seek out Phillip and make amends. Later, after locating Phillip's beautiful wife Kitty (Minnie Driver), Amer begs for forgiveness by citing all the bad things that have happened to him since the accident. When Phillip and Amer set out on a journey designed to alter Amer's current state of mind and finally bring him nearer to enlightenment, the lives of both men are profoundly changed in ways that neither could have ever anticipated.
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The political ripple effect
It won't be official until June 5 or so, but Vermont Sen. Jim Jeffords' defection from the Republican Party will have far reaching implications, including a significant, if indirect, effect on the entertainment industry.
With Jeffords' defection, the Democrats take control of the Senate for the first time since 1994. Assumption of that control means the chairpersons of all Senate committees will change from Republican senators to Democrat, including the Commerce Committee. The Commerce Committee oversees all elements of communications in the United States, including the Federal Communication Commission.
Sen. Ernest Hollings (D-S.C.), a colorful political veteran who ascended to his state's gubernatorial position in 1958 and entered the Senate in 1966, takes over as the committee's chairman.