The United States Of Leland - Movie Review

  • 01 November 2005

Rating: 2.5 out of 5

In The United States of Leland, vaunted young actor Ryan Gosling ostensibly plays the mysterious title character, Leland P. Fitzgerald, a teenager facing a prison sentence for the murder of the mentally challenged younger brother of his ex-girlfriend Becky, but for the most part he's doing a passable Jake Gyllenhaal impression.

Maybe I've seen too many Gyllenhaal movies, but Leland's slightly hunched posture and quizzical facial expression, indicative of a familiar detached dreaminess, recalls indie prince Jake constantly, right down to the casting of go-to indie girlfriend Jena Malone as Becky (who acted alongside Gyllenhaal in Donnie Darko). To be fair, I wasn't thinking of Gyllenhaal for every second Gosling was on screen. Sometimes I was musing over his unfortunate resemblance to Screech from TV's Saved by the Bell.

I don't blame Gosling, who doesn't seem like a bad actor so much as adrift in a role that must've been difficult for him to nail down. Leland makes (too many) pithy observations starting with "people always say" in some scenes, and seems borderline autistic in others; the lack of connection between these aspects of his character marks the difference between intrigue and genuine fascination. This lead character is a self-made challenge for writer-director Matthew Ryan Hoge; it's understandable that he never meets it, but less so why he wrote it in the first place.

If Leland was the enigma at the center of perfectly modulated drama, this might not matter. It does, though, when most of the movie only makes it to that first level -- interest and involvement, not enlightenment. Hoge is like a moderately talented musician tackling an ambitious symphony, hitting perfect and bum notes in equal measure. The way the camera catches Michelle Williams's little exhale after pretending to be asleep in front of her well-meaning boyfriend (Chris Klein), for example, is beautifully observed. But these nice touches keep jostling up against moments that feel false: Would a teenager who just shot heroin really spring so immediately to attention to cover her tracks, as if hiding a cigarette or a joint?

Yet I was never bored with The United States of Leland -- if Hoge is a little too attached to his characters and the actors who embody them, it's understandable. The serially underused Don Cheadle has a strong showcase here as Pearl Madison, a prison teacher and "aspiring writer" who takes an interest in Leland. It's a gesture of both compassion (anyone else in the position do so is too traumatized, mystified, or paralyzed) and selfishness; it's clear from the start that he, as another character puts it, "smells a book." Pearl talks to Leland in off-the-record one-on-one sessions, part counselor and part journalist, allowing Leland to talk about himself, trying to get at the impossible "why" of the horrible crime. One of the screenplay's best qualities is the way it shows Pearl's undeniable weaknesses as a human being, even as he reaches out to Leland in ways others cannot.

Other cast members make an impression, notably Kevin Spacey, back from his early-aughts tour of schlock, as Leland's superstar novelist of an absentee father. In his too-short and too-isolated screentime, Spacey seems to be saying: Look, I'm stealing scenes for a good cause again. The film's women are less lucky; Malone is only half-believable--sort of a fair-weather junkie. Williams isn't given much to do, and the two of them barely register as sisters, let alone sisters whose younger brother has just been murdered.

I suppose Hoge would like his film to speak for itself, but Leland, like its title character, talks a lot without necessarily saying much. The elliptical (Leland's psychological state) and the boilerplate (the faltering relationship between Williams and Klein) don't mix well here. If your audience is expected to grapple with how a seemingly sweet kid could commit murder, shouldn't "why make this film?" come with comparative ease?

Facts and Figures

Year: 2004

Run time: 108 mins

In Theaters: Friday 25th March 2005

Box Office USA: $0.3M

Box Office Worldwide: $343.8 thousand

Distributed by: Paramount Classics

Production compaines: MDP Filmproduktion

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 2.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 34%
Fresh: 31 Rotten: 59

IMDB: 7.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Matthew Ryan Hoge

Producer: Bernie Morris, Jonah Morris, Kevin Spacey, Palmer West

Screenwriter: Matthew Ryan Hoge

Starring: Don Cheadle as Pearl Madison, Ryan Gosling as Leland P. Fitzgerald, Chris Klein as Allen Harris, Kevin Spacey as Albert T. Fitzgerald, Jena Malone as Becky Pollard, Lena Olin as Marybeth Fitzgerald, Michelle Williams as Julie Pollard, Martin Donovan as Harry Pollard, Ann Magnuson as Karen Pollard, Kerry Washington as Ayesha, Sherilyn Fenn as Mrs. Calderon, Matt Malloy as Charlie, Wesley Jonathan as Bengel, Michael Peña as Guillermo, Michael Welch as Ryan Pollard

Also starring: Bernie Morris, Jonah Morris, Palmer West, Matthew Ryan Hoge