Gravity: Movie Review for the Grieving Parent

Picture this:  The grandparents are in town, we’ve enjoyed lots of great family time and fall activities with our two boys, and it is suggested that Mary Tyler Dad and I take a few hours for ourselves and go on a date.  No need to twist our arms.  Based on buzz and glowing reviews, we decide to see “Gravity” in 3D on the IMAX screen.  Date nights are few and far between right now, so we were all in.

Gravity

SPOILER ALERT — you’ve been warned.  

After nachos, a soda so large Leslie Knope would disapprove, and twenty minutes of previews, we prepare to enter space.  We expected a film that looked like the previews, full of terror and thrills and beautiful people in space suits.  All we wanted was a few hours of escapism and the opportunity to be transported.

Yeah, not so much.

SPOILER ALERT — no more warnings. 

Shortly into the movie, it is revealed that Sandra Bullock’s character, Dr. Ryan Stone of Lake Zurich, Illinois (a local, yo), is the grieving mother of a four year old daughter who died in a playground accident.  As Mary Tyler Dad put it so effectively in a Facebook status update,

Just saw GRAVITY. Very, very good, recommend it highly. But. Explain to me how a movie set among astronauts in space has a dead four-year-old daughter in it?

When this particular plot device was revealed, and make no mistake, the presence of a dead child is indeed an often used plot device, Mary Tyler Dad and I looked at each other in the darkness in a moment of solidarity. What can you do?  We knew in that instant that this would be a different type of movie experience than for those sitting around us.

What we didn’t know, what I didn’t know, was how profoundly moved I would be by Gravity, how completely and thoroughly Sandra Bullock’s space crisis is the perfect metaphor for grief, and how absolutely director and writer Alfonso Cuarón captured the pain of child loss and intense grief that parents experience.

Leaving the movie, I was dizzy and exhausted, but I also felt understood, seen, and that I had just witnessed truth.  This is a rare thing in filmmaking.  Days later, I feel grateful for the experience.  I want to sit down across from Cuarón, weep in his presence, and let him know how grateful I am to him for capturing something so profound.

I know, I gush, but it’s true.

When we got home, both of our little ones were asleep.  I couldn’t wait to tuck myself into bed, in the dark and quiet of our bedroom, and Google reviews for Gravity.  What a colossal missing of the mark did I find.  Rotten Tomatoes gave Gravity 97%, but most every review focused on the visuals, the experiential aspect of the movie.  A few loved it, but dinged it for lacking plot.  Some thought the presence of a dead child was contrived.

UGH!  Wrong, wrong, wrong.

One particular review really got to me.  This is an excerpt (italics are mine) from Stephen Carty of Flix Capacitor:

A straightforward tale of survival, the film is decidedly slight when it comes to narrative and character, lacking the kind of underlying layers that might compel you to watch it again. In fact, it could be argued that there’s not much more to the story than Bullock drifting from one space-based predicament to the next. Undoubtedly, each and every predicament is so spectacularly realised that many viewers won’t care. They’ll just enjoy being pulled along for the ride. But on a deeper level there isn’t much to think about, with Cuaron offering little in the way of thematic weight or high-minded ideas. There’s nothing inherently wrong with such an approach, of course, but the end result is never particularly involving in an emotional sense, despite the best efforts of both Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.

Methinks, blessedly, Mr. Carty has no personal experience with the death of a child, cause for me, Gravity was an intense experience both visually and emotionally.

For those of you who have seen Gravity, what most sticks with you?

  • My guess is it might be the moments of sheer terror and isolation in the vastness of space, Bullock untethered, drifting, lost, spinning uncontrollably, with no anchor or sense of where she is or if she will survive.  
  • Maybe it was her tenacious capacity to survive, her ability to stay in the game, her strength, her perseverance, her reaching, grasping, clinging to anything she could that would get her where she needed to be.  
  • Perhaps it was those quiet moments in the Russian space station when she resigned herself to her fate, her own death, the shutting down, her embrace of her own ever after, the haven to be found in nothingness, and then the sudden appearance of Clooney, so calm, so reassuring, encouraging her to stay, inviting Bullock to find purpose and stay.  
  • There is the newfound resolve to survive, to remain, to return to that place of before, where you belong, but the only thing to get you back to that place is your gut, and a few manuals and buttons written in a language you don’t understand, and your will.  
  • Or for some it might be the heroic hurtling through space, the impossible trajectory of speed and pressure and reentry, the movement towards the unknown, but wanting it, risking everything for it, choosing hope with every cell in your body.  
  • And then there is land, the grasping of sand and water, blessed terra firma, finding the capacity to stand, to walk, to move forward, not knowing what you would find, but moving just the same, impossibly forward, only forward, triumphant, powerful when stripped of everything, transformed but still here, still standing.  

This, my friends, is grief, in its purest of forms.  The predicament Bullock’s Dr. Stone finds herself in so closely acts as a metaphor for intense grief, that I cannot shake it.  Instead I embrace it, mulling it over, again and again, grateful for the opportunity to watch it, see it, feel it again through the comfort of dark, soda and nachos at my side.  Bullock’s crystalized tears that gently float off the screen were not overkill, they were my tears, the tears of every parent who survives loss.

The grief of child loss is lonely and terrifying and steals the only anchors you think you have.  It unhinges you, flings you into this vast space that few others have seen, let alone walk through.  Child loss is disorienting, isolating, foreign, vast, unending, transformative, impossible.  The parent that survives this grief is not the same parent, not the same person.  You know things about yourself and the world that can never be unknown, ever again.  Your eyes are opened, your heart is exposed, worn outside your body for the rest of your days, your capacities tested in ways you never imagined were possible.  You are different, stronger, knowing, fierce, changed.

Grief in space -- terrifying, untethered, freefalling
Grief in space — terrifying, untethered, freefalling

If any of you, dear readers, wonder what it is like to lose a child, watch Gravity.  Know that while extreme and visually fantastic as it may be, it fully, completely, and truthfully captures the grief of child loss.  And this is not a plot device, this is not a vaguely sexist tool used to make Bullock more vulnerable, cause I will tell you that there is nothing stronger than a mother who survives the loss of a child.  Nothing.

Make no mistake about it, Gravity is a visual and emotional and glorious depiction of grief, which happens to be set in space.  Truth.

Now You See Me: Movie Review for Families

Last weekend I went to see a movie.  It’s been a long time.  I went with a friend and we picked the movie based on time and pretty much nothing else. Seems that Sunday morning movies are full of a lot of empty seats.  It was perfect.

We settled on Now You See Me, a heist thriller set in the world of magic.  I liked it.  My friend liked it.  We were both entertained.  I thought immediately, this is a great family movie — no sex, no swears, minimal violence, lots of gloss and spectacle.

now-you-see-me-poster

Ha!  Seems my standards might be pretty low compared to some other reviews I am reading online, specific to kids.  Rest assured that my review is written from the POV of a mom with a four year old, and not a tween.  Also, I don’t have a lot of hang-ups about cleavage or minor swears.  This site actually counts the number of obscenities and will give those of you with higher standards than myself the intel you need.

That said, I liked it and thought it might be the perfect summer movie for families with tweens and teens.  This is why:

  • Great and interesting cast.  How can you go wrong with Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine?  You can’t.
  • There is a subtle (for young kids) Robin Hood theme in the movie that parents are sure to pick up on.   When a corporate insurance titan screws his customers after Hurricane Katrina, he gets his come-uppance to the tune of $140 million.  Nice.
  • The dialogue is quick, witty, not too hard to follow and will keep parents involved in the plot.
  • The magic is fantastic.  Honestly, who doesn’t like a good magic show?
  • Mark Ruffalo stars.  Have I ever mentioned that Mary Tyler Dad reminds me of Mark Ruffalo?
  • Isla Fisher holds her own as a magician with all her ego driven male counterparts.  She is smart, funny, doesn’t play dumb (great for young boys and girls to see), and is sexy and modest at the same time.

So an entertaining film, all in all, that will keep families with kids a wee bit older happy and satisfied without being scandalized.  And it won’t involve an animated slug.  At all.  Hooray!

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Disney’s Chimpanzees: Is it kid friendly?

Chimpanzee Poster

Meet Oscar.  He is the toddler hero of Disneynature’s just released documentary, “Chimpanzees.”  It’s his eyes that got me — just look at them. Like my Mom, I’m a sucker for chimps.

Completely on a whim, Mary Tyler Son and I went to go see it this afternoon. We had house guests this weekend, friends from Iowa who both entertained us and brought Crack Pie and Carmel Bacon Cashew Popcorn for our consumption.  As they were preparing to leave yesterday, Mary Tyler Son broke down in tears, probably thinking that he would be stuck with just me all day and no cool older kids to play with.

I knew I had to up my game, but wasn’t certain what was on the agenda. Chimpanzees!  A friend gave it a thumbs up on the facebook and seeing it was rated “G,” I promised the boy that if he behaved himself at a meeting I had to drag him to, we would go see the movie.  We watched the trailer this morning, and with eyes open wide, he was enthralled.

A few folks have asked me if it was “kid friendly.”  For me, YES.  It captivated both three year old Mary Tyler Son and myself.  Just 70 minutes in length, the timing is ideal for young kids.

The cinematography is astoundingly beautiful.  Set in a rainforest in Uganda, the crisp depiction of water drops on the flora and fauna of the forest were simply breathtaking to me.  And hats off to those behind the camera. They managed to capture the personalities of the chimps and the relational dynamics of tribe life in a really engaging way.

Less stellar was Tim Allen’s narration.  I just kept thinking about Tool Time and Pamela Anderson.  Distracting, annoying, and a little too chummy for my taste.

Regarding violence and death and the brutality of nature, in true Disney style, that was skimmed over from my POV.  You should note, though, that my POV is that of a Cancer Mom who has buried a child.  Words like death and dying and pain and sadness are spoken easily in our home.  I know that is not always the case around young kids.

So, for the record, baby Oscar’s mom dies midway through.  She is eaten by a leopard after being separated from her tribe and her Oscar by a rival group of chimps.  None of this is seen, but you do hear the satisfied roar of a large cat.  MEOW.  A moment later, the narration is frank and tells us that Oscar’s mom has died.

More dramatic tension comes from this rival “army” or “mob” or “gang” of chimps headed by their alpha male, Scar.  As is the case in a natural setting, animals must hunt for food.  While no violence is ever shown, the hunt is depicted and it is clear that larger, more powerful animals eat smaller, more vulnerable animals.  In Chimpanzees, that would be a monkey being eaten by the “good” tribe of chimps.  Music intensifies what is happening on screen. Nom nom nom and scene!

A last interesting theme would be that of adoption.  As Oscar is orphaned midway through, we see his attempts to find another caregiver, with no luck. He does thin, and we are shown this.  He is searching for his mom, and we see this, too.  It is not belabored, but the narration makes it clear what is happening and the threat that exists for Oscar being a three year old chimp without a protector.

Enter Freddie!  Freddie is the alpha male of Oscar’s tribe.  In a truly Disney-esque turn of events, Freddie assumes responsibility for Oscar.  It is lovely and tender to see, and honestly could not have been scripted any better. We see both male and female caregivers, we see adoption, we see death and loss, and vulnerability.  Nature at its finest.

But don’t listen to me.  What do I know?  As we were leaving the theater, Mary Tyler Son gave it three “very”s.  “That movie was very, very, very good!” He asked questions throughout the film, “Why don’t the chimp dads take care of their kids?”  “Why did that leopard eat the mom?”  “What kind of fruit is that?”

Best yet, he crawled up in my lap the second we sat down and cuddled with me the whole time.  When Oscar’s mom nuzzled his neck, I did the same with Mary Tyler Son.  When she kissed his cheek, I kissed my boy’s cheek. When she groomed Oscar by picking the ticks off of him, I picked the ticks off Mary Tyler Son.  Not really, but you get the idea.  Seriously, the quality cuddle alone was worth the $13.50 ticket price.

On a heavier note, seeing this movie and knowing that chimpanzees are in real danger due to development and the cutting down of rainforests in Africa, it is hard to deny how vulnerable the animals that we know and love are.  I grew up seeing chimps in the zoo, but not having any real sense of their magnifcence.  Today, I believe Mary Tyler Son got a sense of something that would never be duplicated with a visit to the zoo.

For all patrons who see Chimpanzees in its debut week, April 20-April 26, 2012, Disneynature will make a donation to the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI). You can see the trailer and learn more about JGI here.