The Descendants
I watched a George Clooney film the other day, just in time
to inspire me to root for him in the Oscars. Sadly, he did not win. But if I
were George Clooney, just knowing that this film was made and I am in it will
be enough too.
The primary story is that of a man, initially an indifferent
husband, whose wife met an accident and fell into a coma. While she was
sleeping the sleep of the brain-dead, he learned that his wife was cheating on
him; in fact, she was with her lover the day she had the accident. That’s just
one of his problems. He is also a prima faci real estate lawyer who descended
from Hawaiian royalty and is now handling the biggest sale and turnover of
Kauai land to mainland developers.
True, the latter storyline is a social commentary; the
previous sounds like the dime-a-dozen melodrama. However, the movie was able to
dip and dive between the two stories and turned it into a seamless whole. And
in the midst of it all is Matt King (Clooney) who unravels before our very
eyes.
The centerpiece of this movie is George Clooney 2.0. I have
always had a soft spot for George, him and those adorable eyes and the offbeat
charm. For all I observed, that’s still him on display in this movie, but much
more refined like all the best wines. If
acting was a sport like fencing, his delivery was always en pointe. Not a small feat if the emotion you’re trying to get
across is something as subtle as confusion, indecision and bravura. The best
line for me would be what Matt utters to his dying wife as a means of saying
goodbye:
“Goodbye, Elizabeth. Goodbye, my love, my friend, my pain, my joy. Goodbye, goodbye. Goodbye.”
The cast of characters that supports him are nothing short
of brilliant. I mean, even the usually lousy Beau Bridges managed to hold off a
little on his boorish acting and became something a little more tangible in
this movie.
Having watched Moneyball earlier, and having heard all the
comparisons between Brad and George vying for the Best Actor trophy (which none
of them did anyhow, it goes to Jean DuJardin), I’d say George came out the
winner. By a far cry.
I haven’t done this movie critiquing thing for a while, but
if you ask me, I say watch it. Even if nothing blows up, or you’ve had enough
of revenge movies, or you hate Hawaiian shirts. Watch it anyway. That’s the
only way you could say you saw one of the best movies of 2011. Because The
Descendant is truly transcendent in every way.