Genre: Drama
Director: Lasse Hallström
Starring: Robert Redford, Jennifer Lopez,
Morgan Freeman, Josh Lucas, Damian Lewis
RunTime: 1 hr 47 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: PG
Official
Website: http://www.miramax.com/anunfinishedlife
Opening
Day: 2 March 2006
Synopsis :
An Unfinished Life is a story about forgiveness, forgiveness
of self and of others. It centers on the intersection of the
lives of two sets of people: Einer Gilkyson (Robert Redford)
and his hired hand and closest friend, Mitch Bradley (Morgan
Freeman), who have lived and worked together for forty years
on Einer’s ranch in northwestern Wyoming, and Jean Gilkyson
(Jennifer Lopez), Einer’s daughter-in-law, and her eleven-year-old
daughter, Griff (Becca Gardner), who are escaping an abusive
situation with Jean’s current boyfriend, Gary (Damian
Lewis).
Movie
Review:
Set
on a ranch in Ishawooa, Wyoming, “An Unfinished Life”
is about an abused widow, Jean, who is fleeing her alcoholic
and trigger-happy boyfriend with her daughter Griff in tow.
With nowhere to go, they return to Wyoming to find her father-in-law,
Einar, and old wounds are exposed as each stirs up painful
memories of their unfinished lives for the other.
The
thing is, Einar’s son Griffin was killed in a car accident,
and he blames Jean (Jennifer Lopez) for the premature death.
It’s unfair, but deep down Jean blames herself too.
There is a speech where she reveals her innate inclination
for abusive partners and her reasons are affecting. When she
asks her friend Nina (Camryn Manheim), “Do you think
I’m a shitty mother?” Nina’s answer is no,
Jean’s doing the best she can. Incidentally so is Lopez,
who packs raw energy into the role. She is still unable to
anchor the film as the lead but fortunately, “An Unfinished
Life” has enough pillars in the trio of Robert Redford,
Morgan Freeman and director Lasse Hallstrom.
In
all aspects, the movie is too good to be mediocre but not
good enough to be exceptional. Hallstrom’s impeccable
style shines through his signature shots of silent pauses
pregnant with meaning, such as the long shots of the sprawling
ranch. Yet there is a hesitance in both the storyline and
tone that renders the silences slightly more forgettable than
poignant. In other words, there is a good chance you will
like the movie, but it’s equally likely that you won’t
be able to put a finger on it.
Living
on the ranch with Einar is his solitary companion, Mitch.
The two are loyal and stubborn friends who live for and because
of each other, with Einar responsible for taking care of the
recently-mauled-by-a-bear Mitch and Mitch keeping Einar’s
alcohol tendencies in check. They are cranky and bicker as
old friends do; the two actors fit into their characters like
hands into gloves. Regardless of the inevitable “Million
Dollar Baby” comparisons (which will be made even less
relevant when it’s mentioned that this movie was filmed
earlier than Clint Eastwood’s), Redford and Freeman
can hold their own, thank you very much. Check out the scene
where they’re having lunch with Griff (Becca Gardner),
the banter is explicit and obvious but the acting draws out
such easy leisure from the two that they’re nothing
but a delight to watch.
Clearly,
this is a movie driven by complex relationships. Griff is
a crucial link in the chain as she discovers her explosive
grandfather, warms up to Mitch and fills in the gap between
Jean and Einar that was left by the death of her father. A
promising Becca Gardner stands out from other child actors
by simple virtue of not being annoyingly cloying or cute.
She’s stubborn but almost always surrenders to adults
because she has no choice, as all children do. Griff has regrets,
pride and opinions, and reminds me of a less precocious, more
subdued version of Anna Paquin’s Flora in “The
Piano”.
Damian
Lewis, an exceptional actor to those familiar with his work,
is underutilized as the abusive ex-boyfriend Gary, who merely
looms darkly in the background like a bad metaphor for all
the unresolved issues facing the main characters. Another
slightly bizarre metaphor comes in the form of the bear that
once belonged to Mitch. The bear must be feared as Gary must
not, but both must be overcome before lives can go on.
Hallstrom’s
previous works (“What’s Eating Gilbert Grape”;
“Chocolat”) have had me in raptures; “An
Unfinished Life” is nearly there, but not quite. Though
it is equally heartfelt, it feels somewhat less polished and
a tad half-hearted but perhaps this untreated quality is precisely
what the movie intends to convey – a message that’s
rough around the edges and imperfect but nonetheless needs
to be heard. That everyone will claim to have been dealt a
bad hand but life goes on, and all they have to do is deal
with it.
Movie
Rating:
(A
raw and stubborn movie that’s characteristically Hallstrom-esque:
contented, frank and dysfunctional. Not the crown jewel of
his respectable resume, but certainly a gem)
Review
by Angeline Chui
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