Our Oscar Review

Our Oscar Review

“The Descendants”

By Linda Bergman © 2011HandPrints Featured Writer

 

There are so many neat things about Fox Searchlight’s “The Descendants” you may want to stop reading this, grab a pen and paper and take notes. Ready? First of all, besides co-writing and co-producing, it’s Alexander Payne’s first directorial fling in five years since directing and winning Best Original Screenplay with his partner, Jim Taylor, for “Sideways”. In case you’ve forgotten, Payne also gave us “About Schmidt” and “Election”.

Secondly, this touching comedy-drama, not unlike “50-50” and “Terms of Endearment”, waxes deliciously sacrilegious as it shines a light on the dark side of a family coming apart at the seams. It isn’t afraid to be raw and funny and sad, frequently at the same time. Thirdly, it stars George Clooney as a Haole/Hawaiian living in Honolulu! Even though he plays a schlub (his words, not mine) in a Hawaiian shirt, he is a gorgeous schlub in gorgeous scenery underscored with traditional Hawaiian music.

The story, based on the debut novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings, nibbles around the edges of Hawaiian history. Clooney plays Matt King, a man who works so hard as a real estate lawyer and trustee for his extended family’s land trust, he’s distanced himself from his wife and kids. He acknowledges his second-string status up front, calling himself “…the backup parent”. When his wife goes into a coma after a boating accident, Clooney discovers she’s having an affair. He’s forced to come to terms with their mess of a marriage and his unruly, foul-mouthed ten and seventeen-year-old daughters.

Both young actors do an amazing job, but keep your eyes on the older one, played by a break-out-star-to-be, Shailene Woodley. This girl has STAR written all over her and is a reflection on what Payne does best. He casts well and lets his actors do what he hired them to do. It’s true I have always lusted for George and I admit to saying that he’s worked his charm, good looks, worldly compassion and innate sense of irony into super star status. I have never said it was because of his acting chops – until now.

In a film that could have slipped into schmaltz in the wrong hands, directed by and starring men who have never fathered children, I wondered if George could step out of his glib suit and show us what’s inside when real caca hits the family fan. And he has been nominated for an Academy Award. The truth is this time he really deserves the nod. He keeps a tight lid on his emotional pressure cooker most of the film, but when he lets it blow and steam and drip — so do you!

This movie makes you feel frightened, sad, delighted, anxious, jealous, secure, insecure — all of the emotions that go hand in hand with family. Fun factoid: actor Matthew Lillard, who plays the man having an affair with George’s screen wife, told us this was the ROLE OF A LIFETIME because he got the girl away from George Clooney. He’s so ecstatic , he’s having it tattooed on his body and issuing a line of t-shirts!

 

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About the Author : Linda Bergman

Born and raised in Southern California, Ms. Bergman started working  as an intern for Fouad Said’s revolutionary CINEMOBILE SYSTEMS while a film student at UCLA. She was hired away from Cinemobile by producer William Farella  at Twentieth Century Fox to train in script, casting, film production  and post production. Her first feature credit at Fox was Executive In Charge of Production for the mega hit, “Billy Jack”. After three years at Fox, Ms. Bergman joined ABC’s Movies for Television development team, and  -- some 100 movies later – was promoted to Assistant to the President of MGM Television. and Director of Program Development/ series and movies. When her first child was born, she chose to work from home and began writing. She has written over twenty four films and produced five of them.  She’s best known for her expertise in writing family drama and strong women’s stories. i.e. “The Jessica Savitch Story” (Lifetime); “The Pearl Buck Story (ABC); “The Barbara Mandrell Story” (CBS). “Matters of The Heart”(USA network). Her films have been nominated for an Emmy, an Access Award, The Alpha Award for Excellence in children’s programming, and the prestigious Writer's Guild Award. A leukemia survivor, she is a contributing writer to Writing For Wellness by Julia Davey. In 2007 she was the keynote speaker to an audience of 4000 attendees at City Of Hope’s annual ‘Survivor Day”. She is a professional photographer and writing consultant,enjoys scuba diving, yoga, gardening and painting. She is married to financial wizard, Charles Bergman, and they have two adult children, Sarah and Adam. She is currently developing “So You Think Your Life’s A Movie” for on-line consumption world-wide, SARAH FOREVER, a film about love on both sides of the curtain, and her feature film, TOOT TOOT TOOTSIE, GOODBYE, is currently in-play at Sid Ganis’ Out Of The Blue Entertainment. In her spare time, she teaches screenplay and creative-writing in Los Angeles, New York City and at  IWWG sponsored workshops on the East Coast. (Skidmore, Brown and Yale Universities.) Learn more about Linda Bergman:

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