Movie
Review | 21 Grams
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- In his first English-language film, acclaimed
Mexican director Alejandro Gonzales Inarritu ("Amores Perros")
once again explores the spiritual meaning of living and dying in this
drama of three families that are changed forever by a tragic
automobile accident. Significantly, the title refers to what a body
supposedly loses at the moment of death, perhaps the weight of the
soul.
As the story begins, a tortured heart-transplant patient (Sean Penn)
wonders, "What am I doing in this pre-corpse club?" as his
wife (Charlotte Gainsbourg) implores a gynecologist to use her dying
husband's sperm for artificial insemination. Across town, a
conscience-stricken Born Again ex-con (Benicio Del Toro) interrupts a
birthday celebration with a horrific tale to tell his long-suffering
wife (Melissa Leo). And a hysterical drug-addicted party
girl-turned-suburban housewife/mother (Naomi Watts) faces the
devastating loss of her husband and two daughters.
At first, writer Guillermo Arriaga's complex construction is confusing
- like the non-linear structure of "Memento" - but soon the
seemingly random past-and-present fragments seamlessly interlock with
a cohesive texture, like pieces in a jigsaw puzzle. Indeed, the lives
of the disparate characters are intertwined in riveting and ironic
ways. At the emotional center, grieving Naomi Watts ("Mulholland
Drive") exudes a ferocious, relentless intensity that deserves an
Oscar nomination, while Sean Penn ("Mystic River") delivers
an astonishing, electrifying performance which won him the Best Actor
award at the Venice Film Festival. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to
10, "21 Grams" is a powerfully provocative, weighty 8.
"Life goes on" - all the devastated people whose lives have
been affected by the automobile accident are told - but at what price?
(Focus Features)
Grade: 8/10
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