Review: George Clooney anchors great ensemble in emotional 'The Descendants'
Alexander Paynes scores again with another story of a man in crisis
- Critic's Rating A
- Readers' Rating A-
George Clooney finds himself looking for understanding and forgiveness when his family is struck by a tragedy in Alexander Payne's new film 'The Descendants'
Are you a fan of Toronto Film Festival?
Sign up to get the latest updates instantly.
Alexander Payne had one of the most promising starts of any of the filmmakers in the Class of '99, as I like to call them, and "Election" is one of those films that I find always rewarding to revisit. "Sideways" and "About Schmidt" are both strong, mature pieces of work, and they both demonstrate a clear sense of voice as well as a very strong sense of place. Locations play a major part in his work, helping to define who these people are and giving them a proper landscape in which to play out their issues.
And, yes, like his earlier films, "The Descendents" captures a character in crisis, someone facing a major life-changing event and having to redefine themselves as a result. And while it does not carry the same satiric sting that some of his work is noted for, I think it's warm and human and beautifully made, and it is one more triumph in a long list of recent triumphs for George Clooney as a movie star and an actor both.
Matt King (Clooney) is a lawyer who lives in Hawaii, part of a large sprawling family that can trace their roots on one side back to King Kamehameha. With one side being native Hawaiian and one side being Haole, they hold a very specific place in Hawaiian culture, and they also own an ungodly amount of land on one of the islands. Thanks to conditions of the trust that was set up for the family property, they must eventually unload the land, and they've decided to sell it. The only question remaining is who they're going to sell it to, and that's what Matt is busy with when his wife Elizabeth (Patti Hastie) is in a speedboating accident which leaves her comatose. Matt is, as he describes it, the "back-up parent," and he's never really been fully responsible for his daughters Alex (Shailene Woodley) and Scottie (Amara Miller). Now, suddenly, he's got to step into the role of authority figure and active parent, and he's not quite sure how to do that.
Scottie is ten years old and already a handful, but Alex, at seventeen, is the real problem. She's been shuffled off to boarding school because she and her mother weren't getting along, and Matt never really understood the source of that tension. When he sees that things are getting worse with Elizabeth, he goes to bring Alex home and that's when she tells him what happened: she caught her mother having an affair. That news, the pressure of the impending sale, and the state of his wife's deteriorating health sends Matt into a tailspin, and with the girls in tow, he sets off on a trip that takes them to three different islands, puts them in touch with family they haven't seen in a while, and introduces them to some surprising new people as well.
Want More...
Toronto Film Festival?
- Check out everything there is including photos, reviews, videos.

I like that Hawaii isn't just a backdrop here, forgotten scenery, but is part of the thematic richness of the picture. Our responsibility to all of those who came before us and all of those who will follow is something that is almost never addressed in film, but this movie finds a simple, emotionally direct way to make the point. Of all the places I've traveled in my life, Hawaii is one of my favorites, and if I could make a life there, I would. My family feels the same way, and there's something about the place that I find magical. It recharges me. Matt knows that he is lucky to have ended up in the position to make this choice about the future of the land, and he has to weigh the desires of his family, his community, and his conscience, and no matter what he does, he'll leave someone upset.
I think Clooney, like Brad Pitt, plays both sides of the movie star/actor equation well. Movie stars don't have to act to be great. We are drawn to their charisma, and they can just serve as the center around which everything else in a film orbits based on who they are, with roles designed for their particular personalities. What I love about Clooney is how he tweaks that, how he can subvert our expectations of him, how he can deflate his own cool when it's called for. He's as good her as he's ever been. The whole movie is filled with lovely work by the cast, including Rob Huebel and Mary Birdsong as good friends to Matt and Elizabeth, the very funny Nick Krause as a young friend of Alex's named Sid, and especially Judy Greer, who has often been cast as the bitchy best friend in things, but who brings such unexpected emotion to her part here that she was the one who finally broke me. I was also particularly impressed by Robert Forster in a small role that is without vanity, and I'm reminded just how much soul that guy can project in a few short moments of screentime. He's hard as nails for most of his screen time, so when we do see a bit of tenderness, it's devastating.
Phedon Papamichael's photography is warm and and natural, but it's never just an advertisement for "Wow, isn't Hawaii pretty?" Overall, tech contributions are invisible and impressive, and for me, the entire thing comes together in the final shot of the movie, where Payne sums it all up with quiet assurance. This may not be the savage satire that some Payne fans were waiting for, but I suspect it will resonate deeply with audiences when Fox Searchlight releases it.
"The Descendants" arrives in theaters November 18, 2011.
News From Our Partners
-
Pop Bytes: Michael Jackson's Nephew Negates Wade Robson's Molestation Claims + More
Watch Macklemore, Kendrick Lamar, Ellie Goulding + More on Hangout Festival Livestream
Dumb Celebrity Quotes – Who Said This?
-
The Telefile - The Most Heinous Person on Reality TV This Week
The Telefile - Modern Family: The Best Lines of the Night
The Telefile - Fall TV 2013: What's On When
-
How Far Will 'Star Trek Into Darkness' Boldly Go At Box Office?
'Star Trek Into Darkness': The Secret Behind The Mystery Villain
'Pacific Rim' Trailer Surfaces: Watch Now!
-
Behind The Shocking 'Grey's Anatomy' Finale
WATCH: Tobias Fünke's New Sizzle Reel Is Epic
JLo Steals Spotlight On 'American Idol'
-
Beyonce Pregnant Again? Sources Confirm 'Epic' Star Is Carrying Baby No. 2
'Hangover 3' Red Band Trailer: Take a Walk Down a NSFW Memory Lane (VIDEO)
Why 'Man of Steel' Didn't Use 'Superman' in the Title
-
Weekly Ketchup: Will Smith to Star in Wild Bunch Remake?
Critics Consensus: Star Trek Into Darkness is Certified Fresh
Red Carpet Roundup: Star Trek Into Darkness Edition
-
What to Watch This Weekend: The Season Finales of Nikita, Doctor Who, The Simpsons, and Family Guy
The Office Series Finale Review: That'll Do, Show. That'll Do.
Syfy Renews Warehouse 13 for a Fifth and Final Season
-
Hear This: Destroy This Place shows how press releases can get it right
Watch This: With Beavis And Butt-head Do America, Mike Judge skewered the idiocy of cinematic adventures
Cannes Film Festival: Cannes 2013, Day Two: Iranian director Asghar Farhadi chases A Separation with another stunning drama
Get Instant Alerts on Motion/Captured
Latest Posts
-
This is one you'll want to watch as soon as you've seen the movieFriday, May 17, 2013
-
Plus we look back at a more spirited encounter with the comic actorThursday, May 16, 2013
-
The Channing Tatum/Mila Kunis science-fiction action movie is shooting nowThursday, May 16, 2013
-
Hollywood's busiest alien spends a little more time with StarfleetThursday, May 16, 2013


Comments
Option 1
Comment instantly as a guest GuestOption 2
Option 3
Login or create a HitFix account Login SignupJay
September 14, 2011 at 10:42PM EST Reply to CommentSounds like a great movie. I'd been wondering what Payne's been up to lately.
emdee
September 15, 2011 at 3:46PM EST Reply to CommentReally looking forward to this one
Stormshadow4life
February 4, 2012 at 4:13PM EST Reply to CommentReally late to comment on this one, but we finally saw it yesterday and I thought it was pretty fantastic. Just a really well made, rich, film