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Good Grief!

A Marine mom dies in Iraq, but don't let Grace Is Gone get to you

Eleven months after winning the screenplay and audience awards at this year's Sundance Film Festival, writer-director James C. Strouse's Grace Is Gonehas received a musical makeover care of Clint Eastwood, who reportedly screened the film and thought that it could do with a new original score, which he offered to compose himself. The music—a gently jazzy piano-and-strings theme—is just fine, and a good deal less cloying than what was there before. One can only regret that Eastwood didn't offer to reshoot the whole movie while he was at it.

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Grace is Gone
Written and directed by James C. Strouse
The Weinstein Company, opens December 7

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The "Grace" of Strouse's title is a career Marine who's gone off to fight the evildoers in Iraq, leaving her husband Stanley (John Cusack) behind to care for their two young daughters, 12-year-old Heidi (Shélan O'Keefe) and eight-year-old Dawn (Gracie Bednarczyk). The film's early moments show us life as it continues on the home front, somewhere in the suburban flatlands of Minnesota. Stanley tests the waters of a support group for soldiers' spouses (he's the only man in the room); Heidi—the quiet, soul-searching kid—steals forbidden peeks at the latest images from Baghdad on the evening news; and Dawn—the boisterous, doll-faced kid—pauses for nightly moments of silence at the chime of her synchronized watch. Then two men in uniform show up at the door, regretting to inform Stanley that Grace is now gone for good. At which point, Stanley does what I suppose Strouse thinks any like-minded parent would do: Instead of sitting his girls down for a sober heart-to-heart, he piles everyone into the car and sets off on an impromptu trip to Disney World. Well, not Disney exactly, but a fictional Central Florida happy place called Enchanted Gardens, which, when they finally get there, looks neither particularly enchanting nor lush.

First, though, there's a pit stop to visit Stanley's parents, whereupon we also find Stanley's layabout kid brother, John (Alessandro Nivola), who functions as the movie's voice of blue-state America—so indicated by his scruffy beard, lack of gainful employment at age 32, and habit of referring to President Bush as "monkey boy." "How do these girls feel about the fact that their mother is halfway across the world fighting in an unjust oil war?" he asks Stanley. "They think their mother is a hero who's helping to uphold the precious freedoms that allow you to have your traitorous, pinko opinions," Stanley replies. I'm paraphrasing there, but you get the idea. The level of dialectical discourse rarely rises above that, but discourse isn't really part of Strouse's game plan. Like this season's other drama about a family coping with the death of an Iraq enlistee, Paul Haggis's In the Valley of Elah, Grace Is Gonewants to massage liberal sensibilities about the war without alienating the church-going, Wal-Mart-shopping Middle Americans who might see, in Stanley Phillips, a reflection of themselves.

All the while, Stanley keeps up his morbid shell game in the least convincing of ways, leaving voicemails for Grace on the home answering machine and abruptly changing the subject whenever Heidi asks something to the effect of, "Dad, how come we're playing hooky from school in the middle of the year just so we can go to some dumb theme park?" Some champions of Grace Is Gone have suggested that none of this is meant to be taken literally and is instead Strouse's canny metaphor for Americans' unwillingness to acknowledge the full toll of the second Gulf War. But rather than challenging our national aversion to unhappy endings, both in life and in cinema, Strouse plays right into it: He's devised Grace Is Gone to work on our sentiments the way a porn movie works on our libidos, only he delays the money shot with 80-odd minutes of emotional foreplay en route to the inevitable, orgiastic climax where Stanley finally spills the beans and the girls spill forth the entire contents of their tear ducts. If not a happy ending per se, it's a horribly contrived bit of catharsis, and as if to underline the crassness of his instincts, Strouse drowns out the dialogue of that crucial scene with music—a reminder that, as in all pornography, talk is expendable.

 
  • Brandon 08/12/2009 7:49:00 PM

    I recently fell upon this movie randomly while roaming the aisles of my local Blockbuster. Call me a simpleton but I did not feel that this movie was any kind of war propoganda as you suggest nor did I feel that the loser brother was a symbol of the typical American. As to the ending...a porn? REALLY?! Maybe I look through rose-colored glasses but what I took away from this movie was that John Cusack is an awkward person who doesn't deal with trauma the same way someone with self-confidence would. I saw a man who didn't know what else to do rather than run from the situation until he was ready to face what must be done. Was the movie frustrating? Yes. Was it slow? Absolutely. Was it even at times boring? Completely. But sometimes life is all of these things and I came away from this feeling this movie was just very REAL. The ending, instead of disgustingly spilling seed all over the place as suggested by your column I felt the lack of words was brilliant. We know what Cusack's character was saying to his daughters, we know what sobbing sounds like. What I felt the movie allowed its viewer to do was to imagine. It actually allowed me to create my own dialogue as to how he told his children and what he might have said. By not being able to hear the girls faking a cry it allowed me to reach back into my own times of loss or pain which made this movie much more personal. I have not lost anyone to any wars, I have no agendas when it comes to politics, I even miss symbolism in books and movies and maybe I've missed the real point of this movie but it touched me in a way that no other movie has. I felt it was a realistic depiction of reaction to tragedy - nothing more. Although it was a depressing movie I liked it.

 

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