Brothers

3.00
    Brothers
    2009

    Synopsis

    When his helicopter goes down during his fourth tour of duty in Afghanistan, Marine Sam Cahill is presumed dead. Back home, brother Tommy steps in to look over Sam’s wife, Grace, and two children. Sam’s surprise homecoming triggers domestic mayhem.

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    Cast

    • Tobey MaguireCapt. Sam Cahill
    • Jake GyllenhaalTommy Cahill
    • Natalie PortmanGrace Cahill
    • Sam ShepardHank Cahill
    • Mare WinninghamElsie Cahill
    • Bailee MadisonIsabelle Cahill
    • Taylor GeareMaggie Cahill
    • Patrick John FluegerPrivate Joe Willis
    • Clifton Collins Jr.Major Cavazos
    • Carey MulliganCassie Willis

    Recommendations

    • 90

      New York Magazine (Vulture)

      Sheridan’s actors work with their intellects fully engaged--and they engage us on levels we barely knew we had.
    • 88

      ReelViews

      Brothers is arguably the most successful remake of a foreign film since Martin Scorsese reworked "Infernal Affairs" into "The Departed" and won the Oscar.
    • 88

      Chicago Sun-Times

      This becomes Tobey Maguire's film to dominate, and I've never seen these dark depths in him before. Actors possess a great gift to surprise us, if they find the right material in their hands.
    • 70

      Salon

      Shot for shot, Sheridan's approach isn't radically different from Bier's. And yet Bier gives us more to read between the lines: In her movie, there's an unspoken moodiness, a crackle of sexual tension, between Tommy and Grace's Danish counterparts. That understated but potent secret ingredient is missing from Sheridan's version, as sensitive and as artful as it is.
    • 60

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Irish director Jim Sheridan, who has made his films in America in recent years, now delivers an American remake that hues closely to the original but loses some of its true grit.
    • 60

      Variety

      Though it renders a convincing portrait of fractured family life and boasts its share of powerfully acted moments, this schematic tale of two siblings, ripped apart by jealousy, misunderstanding and unshakable trauma, plays like a more polished but less effective twin to the 2005 Danish original.
    • 58

      Entertainment Weekly

      Brothers isn't badly acted, but as directed by the increasingly impersonal Jim Sheridan, it's lumbering and heavy-handed, a film that piles on overwrought dramatic twists until it begins to creak under the weight of its presumed significance.
    • 50

      St. Louis Post-Dispatch

      As a melodrama, Brothers is passable entertainment. But the film squanders the opportunity to meaningfully portray the impact of war on American lives.

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