- REVIEW
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Grace Is Gone
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Genre
Drama
Producer
Paul Bernstein
Distributor
The Weinstein Company
Release Date
Dec 7, 2007
Release Notes
NY/LA
Review
James Strouse’s film creates a small frame and fills it to bursting. The title character doesn’t appear in the movie; she’s a sergeant in Iraq who dies in action. It falls to her husband (John Cusack) to tell their two daughters, ages 8 and 12. Anguished, scared, loving, he stalls � and stalls � and spontaneously drives them to a theme park in Florida. In the first few minutes, I felt like Captain Kirk at the approach of an enemy starship: �Shields up, Mr. Sulu.� The movie disarmed me, though, not with torpedoes but with so many revelatory moments that it was impossible to remain walled-off. Observe the wariness of Shélan O’Keefe as the daughter who knows but doesn’t want to know, the touching childishness of Gracie Bednarczyk as her younger sister, and Cusack’s affecting imbalance. Grace Is Gone suggests that denial can be an act of faith and love�although not a design for living. Alessandro Nivola as Cusack’s antiwar brother adds the perfect anti-grace note.
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Featured In
- The 2007 Culture Awards in Movies (12/17/07)