Director: Jim Sheridan
Release Year: 2009
Running Time: 105 minutes
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Tobey Maguire, Natalie Portman, Carey Mulligan
"Brothers" was based on a film directed by Susanne Bier known as "Brødre". This American version however was directed by Irish director Jim Sheridan. An interesting film that looks into the effect the war in the Middle East has had on one family. Undoubtedly "Brothers" brings out some excellent performances, certainly from Tobey Maguire who gives one of, if not, the best performance of his career.
Sam Cahill (Maguire) has a nice family, married to Grace (Natalie Portman) with two young daughters. He is in the Marine Corps and is often stationed in Afghanastan. Sam is respected by all, especially his parents. However, his brother Tommy (Jake Gyllenhaal) is the total opposite. A failure in life and just out of prison he comes back to the family causing rifts. With Sam heading back out to Afghanistan, questions are answered on how difficult it is for families with loved ones who are serving in the military and ultimately the effect it can have on everyone involved with quite devastating and unpredictable outcomes.
The storyline is interesting, because it involves real life situations. It makes the film very relateable. The flow of the storyline however, is rather ragged and dismantled. This is to show how lives like this are in real life. It is not easy for any person involved when a loved one is going out to fight for his country abroad. The storyline in "Brothers" enables the viewer to construct their own thoughts on events and connects to them at an honest level. The rough feel to the plot gives the movie an incredible sense of realness. One discrepancy in the plot is that due to its non-flowing nature, if it was not for the excellent performance provided by those involved, there would be nothing linking scene to scene, or, relationship to relationship.
The three leads in the film take full advantage of excellently thought out characters. Maguire shows a darkness in his depiction of Sam, something that has not been seen before by the former Spider Man actor. Credit is thoroughly deserved for his role - the changes in personality he shows for what his character has been through make for excellent viewing. Both Portman and Gyllenhaal back up Macguire's terrific performance with excellent portrayals themselves. Both adding varying dimensions to their characters.
"Brothers" is a solid film to watch. However, we cannot help but think that without the great performances from the cast this film would have suffered. There is no real climax to come by the end of the film and at certain points the plot becomes very predictable. The film survives on the backbone of the strong performances provided by the lead cast members that make this film much better than average.
M+F Rating: 7/10
Reviewed by M+F Reviews.