Director : Jim Sheridan
Producer : Michael De Luca, Ryan Kavanaugh, Sigurjon Sighvatsson
Screenwriter : David Benioff
Starring : Tobey Maguire, Jake Gyllenhaal, Natalie Portman, Sam Shepard, Mare Winningham, Clifton Collins Jr., Bailee Madison, Taylor Geare, Carey Mulligan
This remake of Susanne Bier's 2004 drama is an equally powerful story of family
tensions and how violence affects more than just the victim. But the original
Danish film's strained melodrama translates here as well.
Sam Cahill (Maguire) is a loyal Marine getting ready to head back to
Afghanistan with his men. His wife Grace (Portman) is trying to be strong for
their young daughters (Madison and Geare), but his stern father (Shepard)
couldn't be prouder. Just before he ships out, Sam's black-sheep brother Tommy
(Gyllenhaal) gets out of prison and, when Sam is reported killed in action, he
rises to the challenge to help care for Grace and the girls. But several months
later Sam is found, and what he experienced has left him dangerously paranoid.
The best thing about this film is the way it so carefully depicts the internal
tensions within families. The two scenes during which everyone gathers for
family dinners are simply astonishing, as the intensity builds unbearably while
we wait for someone to explode. Both of these scenes are packed with raw,
electric energy and especially fine performances from the entire cast.
Unfortunately, the whole film isn't this surefooted.
The main problem is that the story continually drifts into overstatement, which
is matched by some over-egged performances. Maguire is the main culprit, with
his wild eyes and strained neck (even his haircut screams "I am now a tightly
wound crazy person"). Opposite him, Portman and Winningham (as the brothers'
stepmum) are elegantly understated, and even the slightly over-acting children
hold their own. On the other hand, Shepard delivers a terrifically brutal
performance as a man defined by his stoicism, while Gyllenhaal is a blast of
fresh air as the only person in the movie who feels fully human.
This general lack of subtlety that's the biggest surprise here, as both
Sheridan and Benioff know better. The film is slickly shot and impeccably
assembled, but it's also manipulative and painfully obvious, constantly
signposting its themes. Even so, there's enough ragged interaction in here to
keep us gripped. Although it's a bit of a surprise when we realise that Tommy's
the only character we care about.
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" OK "
Rating: 15, 2009
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Brothers - Trailer |
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Spiderman 3, Trailer, Sony Pictures |