"Grand Canyon"-Lawrence Kasdan-1991
Lawrence Kasdan began his career as a screenwriter. Among his best known efforts are: "The Empire Strikes Back," "The Return of the Jedi," and "Raiders of the Lost Arc." His directing career has been solid and includes "The Big Chill" and "Body Heat." While I acknowledge that this isn't a great film, still this is one I return every few years.
Mac (Kevin Kline) is attending a Lakers game in courtside seats as the guest of his best friend, Davis (Steve Martin) the producer of violent action films. Mac's car breaks down in the midst of the LA ghetto. He is rescued from a threatening car of gang members by the arrival of his tow truck driver, Simon (Danny Glover).
While Mac awaits the car's repairs completion, the two talk. Simon discusses his visit to the Grand Canyon which he suggests as a family outing.
We meet Mac's wife, Claire (Mary McDonnell) and his son, Roberto (Jeremy Sisto in his film debut) at the pickup point for his summer camp. Mac, an immigration lawyer, has a one night affair with his legal secretary, Dee (Mary Louise Parker). She has a black female friend, Jane (Alfre Woodward) who works in the same building.
Claire comes across an an abandoned baby while on her morning run. She takes the baby home and cares for her without notifying the police. When Mac returns home, the police are notified, and Claire indicates that she wants to adopt the baby. Mac arrives one morning at the gas station where Simon works and invites him for breakfast. While at breakfast Mac tells a personal story where an unknown woman pulls him back from the path of a city bus. She was wearing a Pittsburg Pirate baseball cap. The Pirates are his favorite team and the source of his son's name Roberto for Roberto Clemente. Mac believes that his and Simon's meeting was more than happenstance.
Mac's best friend Davis the producer is shot in the leg by a snatch and grab burglar when he offers the keys to his car instead of the Rolex the robber demanded. He has a "religious" experience in the hospital. Later
he states his desire to make life affirming pictures rather than his violent action films. He later recants this, and in one of the best scenes in the film gives Mac a view of Preston Sturges film "Sullivan's Travels"
which he says shows how an artist is brought back to his true calling after an attempt to make a meaningful
film about the poor. He mentions the Grand Canyon as a metaphor for the gulf between the rich and the poor in America. He says that his depictions of violence are artistic truth. The best line is:"That's part of your problem you know, you haven't seen enough movies; all of life's riddles are answered in the movies." Like much of Davis' pontifications, this is a little off. Riddles are solved, questions are answered.
Kasdan attempts to weave together the live's of six principal characters, male and female, white and black, rich to poor in contemporary Los Angeles. Over 25 years later, the problems remain, and perhaps have gotten worse. In addition to the life intersections, this Los Angeles is brought together by the omnipresent helicopter flying overhead. I had thought that it was a police helicopter; if I had given it any thought. It is a TV newscopter reporting on the traffic. The nasty traffic is used in half a dozen scenes as a common problem. Random violence is also a common problem. Dreams/visions are another common tie in. Critics
often found the film facile, and the ending where a group of the principals make it to the Grand Canyon trite.
They wanted answers and truth. I wonder how many understood that Kasdan doesn't believe that films have answers to life's problems. We bring ourselves to the films we view. The great Edith Piaf's signature song "La Vie en Rose" is one of the best artistic explanations of seeing life through rose colored glasses.
This is an excellent script, and the acting is generally spot on. Kasdan is smarter and better than many of his critics allow, still there are a lot of coincidences holding the plot together. We come back to a willing suspension of disbelief, one of best tools in your film viewing kit. Highly recommended; guess what film is next up?
Lawrence Kasdan began his career as a screenwriter. Among his best known efforts are: "The Empire Strikes Back," "The Return of the Jedi," and "Raiders of the Lost Arc." His directing career has been solid and includes "The Big Chill" and "Body Heat." While I acknowledge that this isn't a great film, still this is one I return every few years.
Mac (Kevin Kline) is attending a Lakers game in courtside seats as the guest of his best friend, Davis (Steve Martin) the producer of violent action films. Mac's car breaks down in the midst of the LA ghetto. He is rescued from a threatening car of gang members by the arrival of his tow truck driver, Simon (Danny Glover).
While Mac awaits the car's repairs completion, the two talk. Simon discusses his visit to the Grand Canyon which he suggests as a family outing.
We meet Mac's wife, Claire (Mary McDonnell) and his son, Roberto (Jeremy Sisto in his film debut) at the pickup point for his summer camp. Mac, an immigration lawyer, has a one night affair with his legal secretary, Dee (Mary Louise Parker). She has a black female friend, Jane (Alfre Woodward) who works in the same building.
Claire comes across an an abandoned baby while on her morning run. She takes the baby home and cares for her without notifying the police. When Mac returns home, the police are notified, and Claire indicates that she wants to adopt the baby. Mac arrives one morning at the gas station where Simon works and invites him for breakfast. While at breakfast Mac tells a personal story where an unknown woman pulls him back from the path of a city bus. She was wearing a Pittsburg Pirate baseball cap. The Pirates are his favorite team and the source of his son's name Roberto for Roberto Clemente. Mac believes that his and Simon's meeting was more than happenstance.
Mac's best friend Davis the producer is shot in the leg by a snatch and grab burglar when he offers the keys to his car instead of the Rolex the robber demanded. He has a "religious" experience in the hospital. Later
he states his desire to make life affirming pictures rather than his violent action films. He later recants this, and in one of the best scenes in the film gives Mac a view of Preston Sturges film "Sullivan's Travels"
which he says shows how an artist is brought back to his true calling after an attempt to make a meaningful
film about the poor. He mentions the Grand Canyon as a metaphor for the gulf between the rich and the poor in America. He says that his depictions of violence are artistic truth. The best line is:"That's part of your problem you know, you haven't seen enough movies; all of life's riddles are answered in the movies." Like much of Davis' pontifications, this is a little off. Riddles are solved, questions are answered.
Kasdan attempts to weave together the live's of six principal characters, male and female, white and black, rich to poor in contemporary Los Angeles. Over 25 years later, the problems remain, and perhaps have gotten worse. In addition to the life intersections, this Los Angeles is brought together by the omnipresent helicopter flying overhead. I had thought that it was a police helicopter; if I had given it any thought. It is a TV newscopter reporting on the traffic. The nasty traffic is used in half a dozen scenes as a common problem. Random violence is also a common problem. Dreams/visions are another common tie in. Critics
often found the film facile, and the ending where a group of the principals make it to the Grand Canyon trite.
They wanted answers and truth. I wonder how many understood that Kasdan doesn't believe that films have answers to life's problems. We bring ourselves to the films we view. The great Edith Piaf's signature song "La Vie en Rose" is one of the best artistic explanations of seeing life through rose colored glasses.
This is an excellent script, and the acting is generally spot on. Kasdan is smarter and better than many of his critics allow, still there are a lot of coincidences holding the plot together. We come back to a willing suspension of disbelief, one of best tools in your film viewing kit. Highly recommended; guess what film is next up?