Stop-Loss


Stop-Loss Information

Stop-Loss is a 2008 American drama film directed by Kimberly Peirce and starring Ryan Phillippe, Channing Tatum, Abbie Cornish and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. It was distributed by Paramount Pictures and produced by MTV Films.

Plot

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Brandon King (Ryan Phillippe) leads a squad stationed in Tikrit during the Iraq War. The film begins with footage from the tour of the squad, explaining 28 days before returning to the United States.

While on duty at a checkpoint, the squad hears gunshots, after which a car speeds past filled with insurgents, one of whom fires an AK-47 at them. King's men jump into their Humvees and follow the insurgents, following them into an alley. When the soldiers get out of their vehicles, the Iraqis shoot at them from rooftops.

As the firefight ensues, an RPG is discharged, destroying one of the humvees, while killing two soldiers inside. Shortly after, another RPG is discharged, exploding an Iraqi vehicle. Squad member PFC. Tommy Burgess (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is unfortunately near the vehicle when the RPG is discharged but Pvt. Rico Rodriguez dives on Burgess and saves him. This is at the expense of severely wounding Pvt. Rodriguez. Also shortly after, Paul "Preacher" Colson, a close friend of Tommy, is killed in Tommy's arms by a wound to the jaw and neck, instantaneously .

Later, Staff Sergeant King enters a house to help injured long-time friend and squad member PFC. Tommy Burgess, he discovers that he had accidentally killed several Iraqi civilians by throwing a grenade to kill an insurgent in a room, unaware that the civilians were there. Brandon is visibly shocked and the ambush ends with three soldiers killed.

Upon returning to their Texas hometown, Brandon and Steve (Channing Tatum) are decorated with the Bronze Star and Purple Heart in a solemn ceremony. A U.S. Senator takes Brandon aside after the ceremony and offers to help Brandon in anyway he can. That night, Steve shows the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder. He gets drunk and digs a foxhole in his front yard, and strikes his fiancee Michelle (Abbie Cornish). When Brandon comes over to check on Steve, he is unable to get through to him. Tommy Burgess, one of the squad members back in Iraq, drives over drunk after his wife has kicked him out.

The next day, Brandon suggests that they all go to the "ranch", a small forest cabin located outside of town. The men pass the time by drinking and watching Tommy shoot his wedding gifts, after their friend Shorty reads the cards. Upon hearing the commotion, a hungover Steve awakens and shoots the cards to silence them and to show his skills in sniping. The next day King, Tommy and Steve report to their military base. When Brandon arrives expecting to be discharged, he is unexpectedly ordered back to active duty in Iraq, based on the military's controversial stop-loss policy. He refuses to comply and goes AWOL, becoming a deserter.

Michelle sympathizes with Brandon's refusal and offers to travel with him to Washington, D.C. to see the Senator who offered to help Brandon out earlier. During a multi-day drive to Washington, D.C., Brandon calls the Senator's office and is told that because he is now a fugitive, the Senator is not interested in seeing him. Brandon and Michelle also visit the family of Paul "Preacher" Colson, one of the three soldiers under Brandon's command killed in the alley ambush and encounter another AWOL soldier who recommends a lawyer to help arrange forged discharge documents and the establishment of a new identity in Canada.

They also visit Rico Rodriguez, a soldier who was blinded, lost his right arm and leg, and burned in the face while saving Tommy from the rocket propelled grenade, back during the ambush in Iraq. After Michelle phones Steve to tell him of their exact location, he arrives in uniform to take Brandon back, and tells Michelle he has volunteered to return to Iraq. Brandon refuses to return and Michelle is furious with Steve for re-enlisting and ends their relationship. Brandon and Michelle finally make it to New York City and meet with the lawyer who gives Brandon forged papers and ID cards which would allow him to flee to Canada in exchange for payment of $1000. After a depressed Burgess commits suicide, Brandon returns to visit Burgess's grave immediately after the funeral, only to end up in a dispute with Steve, ultimately turning into a physical battle with Brandon leaving the cemetery.

Brandon, his mother and Michelle drive to the Mexican border, but Brandon ultimately decides not to abandon everything that he has ever known. While about to cross the border, he tells his mother and Michelle that if he goes to Mexico he'll never really be able to leave the War behind him. The final scene depicts a busload of soldiers, including Brandon and Steve, returning to war.

Cast

  • Ryan Phillippe as SSG Brandon Leonard King
  • Abbie Cornish as Michelle Overton
  • Joseph Gordon-Levitt as PFC Tommy Burgess
  • Rob Brown as Isaac "Eyeball" Butler
  • Channing Tatum as SGT Steve Shriver
  • Victor Rasuk as PVT Rico Rodriguez
  • Terry Quay as Paul "Preacher" Colson
  • Matthew Scott Wilcox as Harvey
  • Connett Brewer as Curtis
  • Timothy Olyphant as LTC Boot Miller
  • Josef Sommer as Senator Orton Worrell
  • Linda Emond as Ida King
  • Ciarán Hinds as Roy King
  • Mamie Gummer as Jeanie Burgess
  • Alex Frost as Shorty Shriver
  • Chandra Washington as Mrs. Shriver
  • Cora Cardona as Theresa Ridriguez
  • Steven Strait as Michael Colson

Production

Principal photography began in August 2006 in Morocco and various locations in Texas "? Austin, Lockhart, San Antonio and Uhland. However, the film was not released until March 28, 2008.

Home release

The DVD was released on July 8, 2008. The DVD includes an audio commentary by director Kimberly Peirce and co-writer Mark Richard, 2 featurettes, and 11 deleted scenes.

Reception

The film received mildly positive reviews from critics; as of August 2011, the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 65% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 136 reviews, with the consensus "Stop-Loss is sincere and complex, and features strong performances, even if it tries to cover too much ground." Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 62 out of 100, based on 34 reviews.

James Berardinelli described the film as one in a line of "preachy movies about the war in Iraq" and described it as "simplistic and uninteresting", citing it as no more effective than movies by others (including Robert Redford, Brian De Palma, Gavin Hood, and Paul Haggis) who preceded Kimberly Peirce in attempting to tell a story with the "basic premise" that "War is hell, the U.S. government is deceitful, and soldiers are being irrevocably damaged." Peter Travers noted in his review of the film that several Iraq War movies had failed the year before ("Box-office casualties last year include Lions for Lambs, Rendition, Redacted, Grace Is Gone, and the unfairly scorned In the Valley of Elah"), and felt that Stop Loss "touches greatness" despite what he called "a curse hanging over it" and "has the juice to break the jinx."

Box office performance

Despite favorable reviews, the film was a box office bomb. In its opening weekend, it grossed a mere $4.5 million in 1,291 theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #8 at the box office. As of June 17, 2008, it has grossed a total of $10.9 million in the U.S. and Canada and over $16,000 in other territories. The film had an estimated budget of $25 million and only grossed $11 million worldwide, less than half of its budget.




This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "Stop-Loss_%28film%29" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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