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Culture

The Descendants

Family feud

Kurt Loder | 11.17.2011 6:00 PM

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And so it begins—the annual attack of the Oscar-bait movies. Last week it was J. Edgar, starring Leonardo DiCaprio in a serious old-man suit. This week, similarly pre-swollen with prestige, it's The Descendants, from Alexander Payne, the director who gave us the uncompromisingly wry Sideways, and starring the age-defying Cary Grant of our time, George Clooney.

It's a picture that once again prompts the self-answering question, "Is George Clooney great, or what?" Here he plays Matt King, a prosperous Oahu lawyer whose family's lineage tracks back more than 100 years into the loins of Hawaiian royalty. Matt and his many, many wastrel cousins are the principals of a family trust that holds the rights to some 25,000 acres of gloriously unspoiled Kauai real-estate. Now an opportunity has come to finally sell it off, and avid developers—claiming only the most tasteful intentions, of course—are lined up with enough money in hand to make the whole family rich beyond the dreams of everyday greed. The cousins, perennially short of funds, are salivating over this once-in-a-lifetime deal; as is their real-estate broker, Speer, a slick huckster with a chiseled-in grin who stands to make a fortune himself in hefty commissions. However, the deal can only go through if Matt, as executor of the trust, approves it. I'd ask what you think happens if you hadn't already guessed.

Adapted by Payne and his co-writers Nat Faxon and Jim Rash from a novel by Hawaiian native Kaui Hart Hemmings, the movie is a family drama on two tidy levels. As the film opens, we learn that Matt's wife, injured in a recent boating accident, has been in a coma for three weeks; soon we learn that she will have to be taken off life support and allowed to die. Matt is drowning in guilt. Consumed with his law practice, he was never much of a husband, or a father, either. Now he wonders what kind of family life he can belatedly create for his 10-year-old daughter Scottie (freckly Amara Miller) and her 17-year-old sister, Alex (notably talented Shailene Woodley). Alex especially is a handful, and when Matt breaks the news that her mother is going to die, she responds with some news of her own: Unbeknown to her dad, mom had been cheating on Matt with another man—something Alex knows from first-hand observation: "He had his hand on her ass. It was gross."

(Article continues below video.)

Clooney really is terrific here as a man adrift on a sea of roiled emotions, ambling around paradise in baggy shorts and shapeless tropical shirts. ("In Hawaii," he tells us, "some of the most powerful people look like bums and stuntmen.") And he deepens the carefully fashioned dialogue with subtle probings of baffled despair and banked anger. His Matt is a man too civilized to inflict a righteous ass-whipping on the character who bedded his wife (in Matt's own bed!). Could he also be too decent to allow the family land to be handed off into the clutches of despoiling hoteliers and heedless condo moguls?

It must be said that Payne doesn't overload with picture with postcard vistas. This is the Hawaii of natives and long-time residents: a little scruffy around the edges, occasionally overcast. It's an enterprising pictorial strategy, but it muffles the islands' grandeur—the very thing Matt is coming to believe must be preserved at all costs. There's plenty of delicately muted heartbreak (Judy Greer, as Speer's despondent wife, is both lively and moving) and there are quite a few laughs, too (often provided by Nick Krause as Sid, a young surfer dude with unexpected dimensions). In a week likely to be dominated by an animated penguin sequel and yet another invasion of bloodless teen vampires, The Descendants offers the satisfaction of grown-up concerns, and the gratifying pleasure of watching Clooney work new permutations of his effortless charm.

Looking back on the movie, though, we see that the characters, however winningly detailed, are basically markers along a path whose end is always in clear view. And the film's prosaic execution closes off the possibilities of sparkle and lift that might betoken a small classic. One can imagine an Academy nod for Clooney come February (he won the supporting-actor award for 2005 with Syriana). But if the filmmakers are anticipating a Best Picture call from Mr. Oscar, they probably needn't sit very close to the phone.

Kurt Loder is a writer living in New York. His third book, a collection of film reviews called The Good, the Bad and the Godawful, is now available. Follow him on Twitter at kurt_loder.


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NEXT: Attorneys General Demand Smaller Four Loko Cans

Kurt Loder is a New York writer who also hosts the SiriusXM interview show True Stories.

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  1. Karl Hungus   14 years ago

    I’m sitting here on tenterhooks waiting the Kurt’s Breaking Dawn review, and they post this instead?? You can just cancel my subscription now!

  2. Paul   14 years ago

    I personally think Clooney is great, but I don’t always think the movies he’s in are great. Strangely, the more serious the movie he’s in takes itself, the less I enjoy watching Clooney’s acting.

    I just recently saw The American and thought it was overrated and a bit… empty on plot and character motivation. Yet it reviewed so well. I always walk away from movies like that wondering what the reviewers knew that I didn’t…

    1. Fluffy Got Demoted   14 years ago

      I was about to post this same sentiment.

      I like Clooney, and want to like his movies, and when he plays a charming asshole I do. When he tries to be serious, I get bored.

    2. EDG reppin' LBC   14 years ago

      The American was okay. But what the hell was up with the girlish tattoo on the character’s back? Seriously, no dude, even a totally badass assassin would get a butterfly tramp stamp.

      1. Paul   14 years ago

        Yeah, Mr. Butterfly… I’m not sure what that was about. Men shouldn’t have any tramp stamps, let alone butterflies.

        Again, I walked away from the movie wondering what everyone else knew that I didn’t.

      2. Karl Hungus   14 years ago

        Personally, I was amused at that whole subplot involving the Mini-14. They made it look like that thing was the last word in uber-tactical cool, and that getting it into whatever the fuck country they were in required the use of vast network of spies and smugglers.

    3. dunphy   14 years ago

      saying the american was overrated is a gross understatement. it fucking sucked.

      it reviewed well, because it was seen as “intelligent” which translates to – it didn’t have a lot of action, so it seemed more intelligent than your typical actioner… where shit actually happens

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  11. Jocon307   14 years ago

    I hope this movie is not like “up in the air” which had such a bummer ending.

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  14. MissBrooks   14 years ago

    Did you just mention Clooney and Cary Grant in the same sentence? I hope you were only referring to the age-defyingness.

  15. Real Vampire   14 years ago

    *sigh*

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  16. kw6   14 years ago

    Any movie with George Clooney in it isn’t worth watching, much less reviewing.

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  23. jhon   13 years ago

    I love Clooney plus lawsuit to like his movies and when he acting a delightful asshole I do. When he tests to be grave I get bored.thanks for sharing
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