Plot
A freak accident brings together a critically ill mathematician, a grieving mother and a born-again ex-con.
Release Year: 2003
Rating: 7.8/10 (105,394 voted)
Critic's Score: 70/100
Director:
Alejandro González Iñárritu
Stars: Sean Penn, Benicio Del Toro, Naomi Watts
Storyline This is the story of three gentle persons: Paul Rivers an ailing mathematician lovelessly married to an English émigré, Christina Peck, an upper-middle-class suburban housewife, happily married and mother of two little girls, and Jack Jordan, an ex-convict who has found in his Christian faith the strength to raise a family. They will be brought together by a terrible accident that will change their lives. By the final frame, none of them will be the same as they will learn harsh truths about love, faith, courage, desire and guilt, and how chance can change our worlds irretrievably, forever.
Cast: Sean Penn
-
Paul Rivers
Naomi Watts
-
Cristina Peck
Danny Huston
-
Michael
Carly Nahon
-
Cathy
Claire Pakis
-
Laura
Benicio Del Toro
-
Jack Jordan
Nick Nichols
-
Boy
Charlotte Gainsbourg
-
Mary Rivers
John Rubinstein
-
Gynecologist
Eddie Marsan
-
Reverend John
Loyd Keith Salter
-
Fat Man
Antef A. Harris
-
Basketball Guy
Melissa Leo
-
Marianne Jordan
Marc Musso
-
Freddy
(as Marc Thomas Musso)
Teresa Delgado
-
Gina
Opening Weekend: $274,454
(USA)
(23 November 2003)
(8 Screens)
Gross: $16,248,701
(USA)
(21 March 2004)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The story in Cruising Paradise that the pictures are marking is called "The Hero is in His Kitchen". It revolves around a payphone conversation between two men, one in Tucson, Arizona and the other in Los Angeles, California. One of the last things said on the last page of the story (the one the pictures are marking) is "Don't buckle under the weight of a heavy heart!"
Goofs:
Audio/visual unsynchronized:
When Cristina is getting her car and tells the valet, "I don't need a fuckin' taxi," her lips do not move.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Michael:
Check, please. Cathy:
Look Daddy, a volcano.
[Cathy blows bubbles into her soft drink]
Michael:
It's very pretty. Drink up your volcano. All right. We're going. Mommy's waiting. Cathy:
Daddy, please. Just one more minute.
User Review
First engrossing, then moving
Rating: 9/10
Many movies in the modern era have experimented with fractured
chronology, but most of the time this technique is used for
entertainment purposes only. "21 Grams" is an intense and thoughtful
film enriched by this technique, taken to an extreme I've never seen
before. We're not talking "Pulp Fiction" here, where a small series of
vignettes are arranged out of sequence. Every individual scene in "21
Grams" seems to be distributed almost at random anywhere in the film.
You have to concentrate when seeing this film for the first time,
because you'll have trouble figuring out what's going on, and even as a
plot starts to emerge, some of the details won't be understandable
until the very end. But it pays off: this isn't like "Memento" or
"Mulholland Drive," where you may need multiple viewings to understand
it all. By the end of this film, the story turns out to be quite
straightforward. It's like seeing a gigantic jigsaw puzzle gradually
pieced together.
Unlike many other films that use this sort of device, "21 Grams" is a
character drama, not a psychological thriller. The story would still
work if it were told in chronological order. Why the scenes are
arranged as they are is not altogether clear, on the surface. I felt
like I was watching a mystery, but after everything came together it
became evident that none of the mystery was contained in the plot
itself. This fact has led some critics to suggest that the scrambled
scene arrangement is nothing more than a cute gimmick designed to make
the film more engaging. But I believe that the device does serve a
legitimate purpose, by drawing out the complexity of the characters and
their situations.
Life is not good for the three principal characters, and it isn't
getting better. Sean Penn plays a 40-something man with a failing
heart, Naomi Watts plays a young woman facing great tragedy, and
Benicio Del Toro plays an ex-con consumed by guilt. Penn and Watts come
off as ordinary individuals reacting as anyone might under the
circumstances, but Del Toro's character is particularly fascinating.
He's been rehabilitated through religion, but he's still far from
perfect. As a father, he has a scary presence that makes him seem
borderline abusive at times. But he has developed a powerful
conscience. Is he right to hate himself for what he did? The movie
never answers that question. I just appreciated that the film resisted
the temptation to make him into a caricature. He is neither hero nor
villain. He is simply understandable on a very basic human level, as
are the other two characters.
We have the feeling that Watts and Penn are wrong to condemn him as
strongly as they do. They do not understand his situation, or that he's
suffering just about as much as they are. On the other hand, we as
viewers can perfectly understand where Watts is coming from. That's
what makes the scrambled scene arrangement so effective: it never
allows any one character to gain our total sympathy. By the time we've
sorted out the plot threads, we've identified with all three characters
on an emotional level while at the same time understanding their
faults. These people are trapped in their own limited worlds, and with
our omniscient viewpoint we can scarcely blame any one of them for
their feelings or actions. We can see clearly what these characters
cannot, which is that they are more victims of cruel fate than people
who are truly guilty of anything.
What is the movie's message? That people shouldn't be so quick to judge
others? That could be one interpretation, but what's nice about the
film is that it doesn't hammer this lesson into us. It just tells a
moving and stirring tale about complex characters, and viewers can take
from it what they please. The title refers to a parapsychological
belief about the weight of the human soul, and it's used in this film
as a metaphor for the fragility of life. If life is fragile, then it's
also precious, and people need not waste their time on vengeance.
0