"Finding Grace in Paradise"
or
"Keeping the Kidneys and Other Vital Organs Working and Hoping for the Best"
There's a lot of water in Hawaii. It's an island, after all, a string of volcanic mountains surrounded by water on all sides. Plus, there are the myriad rivers that course through, invading the land, falling off the mountains combined with the torrential rains that sometimes beat down with such ferocity that they turn highways into flood corridors, making negotiating trails on the islands difficult. All that water does have an advantage—it turns the volcanic soil green with lush verdant beauty.
And it also hides the tears.
Alexander Payne's adaptation of Kaui Hart Hemmings' novel The Descendants is something of a miracle, a nearly perfect adaptation, much like James L. Brooks' transformation of Larry McMurtry's Terms of Endearment (and if there's any justice...or taste...in Hollywood this awards season, Payne's film will be awarded as much gold as Brooks'). It retains Payne's way of nailing a particular culture, as he has with right-wing religion, high school politics, retirement wanderlust, and the pretentious pseudo-culture of Napa Valley. In The Descendants, it's the extreme casualness of the privileged Howlies, who have invaded the island culture, overcoming it like a tsunami.
But, there's a difference here. All of Payne's films have been a trifle dodgy, askew or off-kilter. Not The Descendants. It is a fine distillation of the book, taking the best of the dialogue, a perfect cast of vets and unknowns and bringing it together with polish, exquisite comic timing and poignancy.
Attorney Matt King (George Clooney) is the last in a long line of Kings of Hawaii, who trace their roots back to King Kamehameha, a family history that has held in trust 25,000 acres of undeveloped, still natural Kauai'i coastline which will be out of trust in seven years. Matt is the sole trustee, but is in negotiations with his family on how to deal with the land. A decision is to be made soon.
But, that's the least of Matt's concerns. His wife, Elizabeth, has been put in a coma from a boating accident. He is left with her medical decisions and the caretaking of their two daughters—Scottie, 10 (Amara Miller), and Alexandra "Alex," 17 (Shailene Woodley, I hesitate to mention he performance as a standout, because everyone is great)—a difficult task as the aloof and professional Matt is, for all intents and purposes, "the back-up parent." Scottie is starting to react to her mother's hospitalization in odd, destructive ways...and Alex? She's already been shipped to another island to a strict boarding school for dabbling in drugs and older boyfriends. "What is it with the women in my life that they want to destroy themselves?" Matt asks in one of the many narrations that dominate the film.
Good question. And the answers to that one aren't even explored in depth here. Let's just say that Matt is responsible, and must be more responsible if he is to save his family, nuclear or extended. However diligent he might be as a man or a person, he cannot prep for the emergencies that life hands to him. He cannot research what to say or argue before the court of his kids, and absolutely must find a way through the briar-patch of mercurial emotions that has nothing to do with reason or law. There is no precedent to draw upon for what he is going through. This is life, not jurisprudence. There is no preparing for that. Life is off-the-cuff, on the wire, winging it because life is what happens (as John Lennon said) "while you're busy making other plans." In the film, Clooney's character must deal with both death and life and find the personal grace to do both, simultaneously, letting go of the past and dealing with the essential unforeseeable future.
There are two axioms that I hold dear in life as true, and recently they came up again, in my life, to steer me to a clearer, calmer path. The first is "actions speak louder than words." Words are fine, nice, even comforting. But they are useless, and can be even considered lies if not backed up by a concurring action.* The other is one of the few things I take as absolute truth from the Bible and that is that "love never dies." I realized that with the death of my parents, but it is only reinforced to me, day after day. Like energy in science, once it's generated, love never leaves the Universe. It can change, sometimes savagely, turning into hate (at least, temporarily, because the opposite of love is indifference), but it never goes away...never "vanishes." And The Descendants, in its funny, quirky way, eloquently speaks to those truths.
I love this movie. There are choices that Payne and his co-writers have made in the presentation of Hemmings' novella that are oddly poetic, even beautiful, and with the clear-eyed collaboration of his actors, have made up some of the most memorable scenes in a film that have moved me this year. It is certain that many of them will show up as "Moments" in the year-end wrap-up of the best of 2011. This one might be the best film of the year.
But, the movie-year, despite being deep in its 11th month and on the cusp of the 12th, is still young. Who knows what lies ahead?
The view from 2018: 2011 was a very good year for movies: Look at the Oscar nominees—War Horse, Hugo, The Tree of Life, Moneyball, Midnight in Paris, The Help—most of those I recall quite fondly and have stuck in my mind. But The Descendants is still probably my favorite of that year because it moved me so consistently (not that the others didn't) and so intensely. Just a good adaptation of a good novel with a mind of its own that sort of vaults it beyond "adaptation." I revisit it quite a bit.
* It's especially true of politicians. Think of that during the next political campaign.
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