Dictionary Definition
frailty
Noun
1 the state of being weak in health or body
(especially from old age) [syn: infirmity, debility, feebleness, frailness]
2 moral weakness [syn: vice]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The condition quality of being frail, physically, mentally, or
morally; frailness;
infirmity; weakness of resolution; liability to be
deceived or seduced.
- 1748. David Hume. Enquiries concerning the human understanding
and concerning the principles of moral. London: Oxford University
Press, 1973. § 36, n. 1.
- the limitations and restraints of civil government, and a legal constitution, may be defended, either from reason, which reflecting on the great frailty and corruption of human nature, teaches, that no man can safely be trusted with unlimited authority ;
- 1748. David Hume. Enquiries concerning the human understanding
and concerning the principles of moral. London: Oxford University
Press, 1973. § 36, n. 1.
- A fault proceeding from weakness; foible; sin of infirmity.
Translations
condition of being frail
- Czech: křehkost, slabost
- Portuguese: fragilidade
References
Extensive Definition
Frailty is a 2001
psychological
thriller film, directed
by and starring Bill Paxton,
and co-starring Matthew
McConaughey. This film is the directorial debut for Paxton. The
score was composed by Brian
Tyler. The plot focuses on the strange relationship two young
boys have with their father who believes that he has been commanded
by God to kill demons, and the consequences this belief has after
the boys have grown up.
Plot
A man enters the Dallas, Texas FBI office one rainy night, and introduces himself as Fenton Meiks (Matthew McConaughey). He wants to speak to Agent Doyle (Powers Boothe) about his belief that his brother Adam (Levi Kreis) is the notorious "God's Hand" serial killer.Fenton explains that he is only coming forward
now because earlier that day Adam had called him to say that he
cannot stop the "demons" because there are too many, and killed
himself. Fenton says that he stole Adam's body to bury it at the
Thurman Rose Garden, according to a promise the brothers made many
years ago. Agent Doyle continues to be skeptical, and Fenton
unfolds through flashback the story of their childhood with their
widowed father (Bill
Paxton).
When Fenton and Adam were young boys, their
father tells them that he had been tasked by God to root out and
destroy demons whose names were to be provided for him by an
angel. Special tools have
been given to aid him: gloves to protect his hands, a lead pipe to
knock them unconscious, and an axe to destroy them with. At this
news, Fenton mentally shuts down, refusing to believe their father
will really kill people, but Adam quickly believes their father to
be doing God's work.
Their father captures his first victim, a woman
named Cynthia Harbridge (Cynthia Ettinger). When he touches her, he
claims he can "see" the sins she has committed, and has no guilt
when he uses the axe to "destroy" her. Both Fenton and Adam are
forced to witness this act; Fenton is traumatized, but Adam claims
he can "see" the woman's sins as well. Her body is buried outside
in the Thurman Rose Garden, upon which their house is located.
Fenton tries to explain to Adam that their father has gone insane,
but Adam continues to believe him, leading Fenton to conclude that
his younger brother has been successfully brainwashed.
After the third victim is captured, Fenton
decides to inform the town Sheriff (Luke Askew).
When Sheriff Smalls arrives, Fenton's father kills him with the
axe. Unlike the previous acts, the father says that this one is
"murder" and blames Fenton for forcing him to commit it. The father
confesses that the angel told him that Fenton is also a demon and
has to be killed. Fenton begs for mercy, and his father locks him
in the cellar. After being nearly starved to death, Fenton has a
"vision of God" and is let out.
Fenton, Adam and their father track down another
supposed demon and capture him. Fenton is given the axe to chop the
man's head off, but he instead kills his own father. Fenton moves
to release the captured man, but Adam grabs the axe and kills the
"demon", apparently having taken over their father's work.
Back in the present, Agent Doyle is convinced
that Fenton's story has weight, and drives Fenton to the Thurman
Rose Garden, where Adam would surely have buried his victims. Once
they arrive, it is revealed that the adult man who has been calling
himself "Fenton" is really Adam. However, the "God's Hand" killer
is the real Fenton, who kept the bodies of his victims as trophies
in his house basement. Fenton used the "God's Hand" nickname to
lure Adam out, knowing that his brother would have to kill him one
day so to fulfill the task their father could not do. Fenton has
been buried in the Rose Garden, along with the many demons Adam has
"destroyed" over the years.
Adam also explains that Agent Doyle was lured out
there because he was on God's list. When Adam touches Doyle's hand,
a vision is revealed of Doyle killing his own mother in cold blood.
Adam picks up the same axe that his father used and destroys Agent
Doyle, burying him in the Rose Garden.
The next day following Agent Doyle's
disappearance, agents at the bureau frantically try to find the
"Fenton Meiks" he left the building with. Agent Hull, who had met
Adam-as-Fenton the previous night cannot remember the man's face,
and all security footage showing Adam's face has been distorted.
Eventually the FBI storm the real Fenton Meiks' house, and find
evidence of his killings, along with Agent Doyle's FBI badge.
Agent Hull visits the local Sheriff's office, and
the Sheriff is revealed to be Adam Meiks. Agent Hull does not
recognize him, and explains that his visit is to inform him about
his brother's death and killing spree. They shake hands, during
which Adam holds a moment too long only to tell the agent, "You're
a good man."
Cast
- Bill Paxton as Dad
- Matthew McConaughey as Adam
- Powers Boothe as FBI Agent Wesley Doyle
- Matt O'Leary as Young Fenton
- Jeremy Sumpter as Young Adam
- Luke Askew as Sheriff Smalls
- Levi Kreis Fenton
- Derk Cheetwood as Agent Griffin Hull
- Alan Davidson as Brad White
- Cynthia Ettinger as Cynthia Harbridge
- Vincent Chase as Edward March
- Gwen McGee as Operator
- Edmond Scott Ratliff as The Angel
Reception
Frailty earned $13,110,448 over its entire domestic run, and received generally positive reviews, with a 76% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Roger Ebert in particular singled it out for praise, giving the film four out of four stars and declaring that "Frailty is an extraordinary work, concealing in its depths not only unexpected story turns but also implications, hidden at first, that make it even deeper and more sad." It has since become something of a cult film.Details
- German title: Dämonisch
- Italian title: Nessuno è al sicuro
- Greek title: Το σπίτι του τρόμου (The house of terror)
- Polish title: Ręka boga (The God's Hand)
- Brazilian title: A mão do diabo (The devil's hand)
- MPAA rating: rated R for violence and some language
- runtime: 100 min
References
External links
frailty in Czech: Lovec démonů
frailty in German: Dämonisch (Film)
frailty in French: Emprise (film, 2001)
frailty in Italian: Frailty - Nessuno è al
sicuro
frailty in Japanese: フレイルティー 妄執
frailty in Polish: Ręka Boga (film)
frailty in Chinese: 上帝之手 (2001年電影)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abulia,
airiness, airy texture,
amiable weakness, attenuation, bad habit,
besetting sin, blemish,
breakability,
breakableness,
brittleness,
bug, cachexia, cachexy, catch, changeableness, chronic
ill health, collapse,
cowardice, crack, crackability, crackableness, crispness, crumbliness, crushability, crushableness, daintiness, debilitation, debility, decrepitude, defect, defection, deficiency, delicacy, delicate health,
destructibility,
diaphanousness,
dilutedness,
dilution, disintegration, drawback, effeminacy, enervation, ethereality, exhaustion, exiguity, exility, failing, failure, faintheartedness,
faintness, fallibility, fault, faute, fear, feeblemindedness,
feebleness, fineness, fissility, flaw, flimsiness, foible, fracturableness,
fragility, frangibility, friability, gauziness, gossameriness, gracility, healthlessness, hole, human equation, human
frailty, human weakness, humanity, humanness, hypochondria, hypochondriasis, ill
health, imperfection, impressionability,
inadequacy, indecisiveness, infirmity, infirmity of will,
inherent vice, insubstantiality,
invalidism, invalidity, irresolution, kink, lacerability, laciness, languishing, languishment, liability, lightness, little problem,
mistiness, moral flaw,
moral weakness, morbidity, morbidness, mortality, paperiness, peakedness, pliability, poor health,
problem, rarity, rift, shortcoming, sickliness, sleaziness, slenderness, slightness, slimness, snag, something missing, spinelessness, subtility, suggestibility, susceptibility, taint, tenuity, thinness, unhealthiness, unsoundness, unsubstantiality,
unwholesomeness,
vagueness, valetudinarianism,
velleity, vice, vulnerability, vulnerable
place, wasting, wateriness, weak link, weak
point, weak side, weak will, weak-mindedness, weakliness, weakness, wispiness, womanishness