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Closed Caption; Full frame; English and Spanish subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Window to the Soul [2:25]
2. Fall From Grace [2:05]
3. Raised in Religion [2:16]
4. At First Sight [2:48]
5. Truth Behind Puppets [2:28]
6. Hollywood [2:01]
7. Where Others Feared [2:46]
8. Family People [3:58]
9. Heritage U.S.A. [4:18]
10. Broken Ground [3:29]
11. Moral Majority [4:14]
12. The Dragon [3:11]
13. A Higher Calling [3:48]
14. Pure Torture [3:42]
15. Already Guilty [4:28]
16. Kills Their Wounded [3:17]
17. Don't Label People [3:28]
18. Back in Front [4:42]
19. Power Look [4:16]
20. Desert Sanctuary [3:29]
21. Special Guest [2:52]
22. Burying the Past [3:14]
23. People Count [3:05]
24. Credits [1:51]
This rapturous documentary charts the path of former evangelist icon Tammy Faye (formerly Bakker), from her days as queen of the PTL (Praise the Lord) Ministry to her fall from grace and subsequent drug addiction to her relative exile. Codirectors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato start their devotional film by showing the woman today, living quietly in the same Palm Desert house that she escaped to with Reverend Jim Bakker in 1987. Her shoulders thickly padded and her face masked by a thick cosmetic shield ("...eyelashes one-by-one, mascara, eyebrow pencil," she recites as if a litany), Bakker reintroduces herself to us by reading sad verse and making fairly creepy comments about collecting the glasses of dead friends and relatives. Soon, the constants in her life are established -- puppets, Jesus, toy dogs, and eyelash glue -- and we quickly realize these passions are just as human as anyone else's. Stopping well short of ridiculing their subject, Bailey and Barbato paint Faye as a surprisingly earnest figure who has supported people often rebuffed by some fundamentalist Christian groups, including AIDS victims and drug abusers. As kooky as she seems, and as easily lampooned as she may be, Tammy Faye is treated with love by these filmmakers. Nowhere is this more apparent than in Eyes's second half, a day-in-the-life of her post-PTL-scandal recovery period. Somehow, The Eyes of Tammy Faye manages to be as fascinating (and far less smug) than most viewers would probably expect. Eddy Crouse, Barnes & Noble
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