What's Eating Gilbert Grape Movie Review
What's Eating Gilbert Grape Review
"What's Eating Gilbert Grape" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Lasse HallströmProducer : David Matalon,Bertil Ohlsson,Meir Teper
Screenwiter : Peter Hedges
Starring : Johnny Depp,Leonardo DiCaprio,Juliette Lewis,Mary Steenburgen,Darlene Cates,Laura Harrington,Mary Kate Schellhardt
His fans may love Leonardo DiCaprio best for his role as the scampy hero of a
ship called Titanic, but I'll always know him best as a retard. DiCaprio's
role as the severely autistic Arnie Grape -- a role which DiCaprio owned so
wholly most moviegoers thought the then-unknown actor was truly retarded. He
won a 1994 Oscar nomination, losing to Tommy Lee Jones' turn in The Fugitive,
just one in a series of recent Oscar heresies.
So who's Gilbert Grape, and what's eating him? Gilbert (Johnny Depp, in
another outstanding performance from the film) is the unofficial caretaker of
the Grape clan, a rural Iowa family that includes the aforementioned Arnie,
coming up on 18 years old, and the enormous Momma (Darlene Cates), a 500-pound
woman who hasn't left the Grape house in nearly a decade. Taking care of Arnie
and Momma is enough work for three people -- but sisters Ellen and Amy don't
carry their weight, leaving Gilbert to do the heavy lifting (no pun intended).
Compounding problems are the fact that Gilbert's job (yes, he works, too) at
the corner store is jeopardized by the new FoodLand (complete with lobster
tank), he's having an affair with a crazy (married) woman (Mary Steenburgen),
and, in fact, the Grape's house is crumbling around them.
It's enough to drive a man to suicide, but Gilbert is given a brief respite
from the chaos of daily life when Becky (Juliette Lewis) arrives in town with
her mother as part of a trailer caravan. When Becky's trailer breaks down,
she's stranded in town and turns her attentions to Gilbert -- and everything
gets turned upside down.
On the strength of DiCaprio and Depp's performances, What's Eating Gilbert
Grape is a fantastic look at the anachronisms of small-town life and the
myriad problems of coping with a go-nowhere existence. The dialogue is
realistic to the point of putting you in the scene, and Lasse Hallström's
direction, which normally I find intrusive and workmanlike, is spot-on for
once. The quirkiness of the story really puts the film over the top -- you'd
expect to see these people on Jerry Springer (and in fact, Cates was discovered
by novelist Hedges on a daytime talk show) -- making Gilbert Grape a rare slice
of life that you just don't get in the movies any more.
The only real weakness in the film is Lewis, who doesn't come across as either
likable enough to attract Gilbert's attention or alternative enough (short hair
notwithstanding) to attract anyone else's. It's unfortunate, because her
arrival in the town is meant to propel the plot, but in my opinion, Gilbert's
got enough eating him without her.
The new DVD adds a commentary track and three featurettes.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





