The Descendants

Film

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5

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<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Thu Nov 10 2011

Alexander Payne has shown in the likes of ‘Election’ (1999) and ‘About Schmidt’ (2002) that he finds humour no barrier to seriousness, or vice versa. Payne’s view of life is affectionate, with a hint of barb and caricature, and he takes a special interest in men in crisis and the healing power of journeys, both of which came together winningly in his last film, ‘Sideways’ (2004). Payne is also at ease among America’s richer suburbs and the folk who live there, so it’s no surprise he should be drawn to Kaui Hart Hemmings’s novel ‘The Descendants’, the tale of a likeable Hawaiian lawyer born of old money who is trying to mend a fractured family and redefine his values. It’s a warm exercise in gentle observation, modest laughs and easy compassion, but it lacks the incision to make a major impact as drama or comedy. It’s too laidback to offend or excite. A middle-of-the-road road movie.

But within this framework ‘The Descendants’ offers numerous pleasures. George Clooney is Matt King, a wealthy Hawaiian with two young daughters and a wife (Patricia Hastie) in a coma after a speedboat accident. King narrates his own story: he and his wife had been drifting apart emotionally, and he had been losing sight of his kids too. Alexandra (Shailene Woodley) is 17 and misbehaving at boarding school before her father drags her home to deal with the fallout from her mother’s accident. Meanwhile, ten-year-old Scottie (Amara Miller) is a bundle of anger and insults who alternates between bullying and being bullied at school.

Other matters are pressing. The first is a long-term issue: King must decide on behalf of his family whether to sell a large piece of land to a developer or keep it unspoilt. The second is a bolt from the blue: King’s wife was having an affair before she slipped into the coma from which the doctors say she will never recover. Together, they serve to launch King and his daughters on a healing tour of Hawaii.

Whether you buy Clooney as a family man – an unusual role for him – will affect how much you’re willing to buy ‘The Descendants’. I’m not sure he is convincing as a father of girls, even one with a lot of work to do, although he’s best when adrift and lost for words, such as in a tender nighttime scene in which he confides in his older daughter’s brash friend, Sid (Nick Krause). Much has been made of how Clooney has shed his chiselled image for this film but, bar the odd dodgy T-shirt, I can’t see it. Where Clooney and his co-stars excel, though, are in the moments between the comic set-pieces and dramatic high points, when they’re just hanging out or, in a poignant final scene, settling down to watch ‘March of the Penguins’ on the sofa.

Payne is an unobtrusive director, a filmmaker who lets the script do the walking – in this case, perhaps too much. The characterisation never feels deep enough and he struggles to rein in the comic moments so they don’t jar with the core of the story: a woman lying motionless in a hospital bed. A coma-dy is a brave goal to aim for, but it’s one that Payne just misses despite some nifty work en route.

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Cast and crew

Director:

Alexander Payne

Screenwriter:

Alexander Payne

Cast:

George Clooney

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (18 ratings)
  • I lost my mother a month ago, and I was with her in the hospital while she was comatose and when they pulled the plug. Every cliché hospital-based movie I've watched seems dramatized and over exaggerated, without showing the most haunting physical issues. This movie, however, really centralizes on the basis of a dysfunctional family overcoming loss, which is not something that can be tied up with a bow in the end. It was a realistic, insightful film that can remind us all of the ties and bonds between humanity.

    Taylor Sat Mar 30
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  • One of the better films I have watched recently. Really enjoyed the whole film. well worth 4 stars.

    deec Sat Mar 10 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • Wow. Another two star performance from Clooney. Though he's brilliant as vain, shallow types like Miles Massey opposite equally vain and shallow Catherine Zeta Jones in Intolerable Cruelty, the moment there's a nano-second of genuine emotion required, Clooney crumbles. . This film is everything you'd dread seeing in celluloid/digital form - badly written, not well acted, not particularly well shot, and unimaginative - these last two totally unforgivable given the film's supposed to be set in Hawaii. The continuity’s terrible from the outset: George hot and sweaty one moment, one second later – not. As for George’s make-up – visible mascara throughout? Who does he think he is, Cheryl Cole or Katie Price? . What beats me is why Clooney or the studios pay so much for PR to lobby “the Academyâ€� so that George scrapes a nomination. The same happened last year with the merely so-so “Up In The Airâ€� – a film saved not by Clooney’s acting, but by the brilliant Vera Fermiga. . Don’t waste your time. Strictly two (generous) stars.

    Mike Sun Mar 4 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • I went to this with my wife, expecting the worst as, like many i agree that Clooney's films generally come up a bit short. This one doesn't. It is very good in almost all respects. It is technically good, well acted and the plot and script work well. To me it deserved to win "Best Film" as it is the best that I have seen since "True Grit" (Mk II) . Easily Clooney's best film. The one question that I have is why was it necessary to have the older girl's boyfriend in the film? He added nothing to the plot and, for me, somewhat cheapened the otherwise excellent plot. His only decent contribution was getting punched by father-in-law. However, it's a small gripe - go and see this film!

    Dave A Sun Mar 4 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • How can you not like this film?? It's not 'fluffy' at all. There is no mawkish sentimentality or airbrushed deathbed scenes. Clooney is superb as the imperfect father. The dialogue and plot are moving, funny, cliche free and unpredictable, so for me it's not a 'middle of the road' movie. It's also far better than the off beat Rampart which Time Out gave 5 stars too?

    Raegana Wed Feb 29 2012
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  • Went to see this with a few questions: is it that good, is Clooney finally brilliant in a film. Having seen it, its a chore of a watch. The first 45 minutes isnt that bad and you do feel a sympathy for him in that he really has no idea how to be the man he wants to be. However the sentimentality and frankly unbelieveable series of events that take you to the end made me just shake my head in disbelief. I felt the girl that played Alexandra did well in her role as a pseudo-mother figure. But Clooney? His films just leave you with a hollow feeling. There were tidbits that I felt oh use that, and then it went back to this conceited death run. Everyone experiences loss and knows how it feels. This film didnt leave me with that. Just a loss of time.

    David Thu Feb 23 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • Had a feel of "table for five" for me, in as much as similarly, I wanted to throw myself under a bus when it finished.

    blib Tue Feb 21 2012
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  • much better than i expected and funny though i seemed to be one of few in ceinema who laughed, i wonder why?

    Christopher Jackson Mon Feb 20 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • what rating is this ?

    megan batson Thu Feb 16 2012
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  • I enjoyed the easygoing pace of this film. It gave time for character developement. It was quite clear at the beginning that the Clooney character was a pretty inadequate father but adversity changed him to the extent that there is a wonderful scene where his older daughter defends him. Fine acting from all concerned and a good script. Perhaps it does resonate more with those of us who have suffered the loss of a loved one and been left with children to nurture. But I would have thought that it would take a hard heart not to be touched by two scenes in particular. One where the news that mother will die is conveyed to the youngest daughter and the other where the grumpy grandfather says goodbye to his daughter. Both scenes are done without audible dialogue which makes them even more powerful, something silent film makers well understood. A lovely film that I'm glad to have seen.

    Peter Ludbrook Thu Feb 16 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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