‘Stop-Loss’ asks the hard questions
Provocative drama contemplates what ‘supporting the troops’ really means
![]() | Ryan Phillippe plays a soldier who's relieved to be home, but then he finds out he's been stop-lossed and is expected to serve yet another tour in Iraq. |
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But even if you think the U.S. presence in Iraq is justified, Kimberly Peirce’s “Stop-Loss” provides a poignant and shattering portrait of what our soldiers have to endure in combat, at home, and from an army that sends its men and women back into battle over and over again.
The film’s protagonist, Brandon King (Ryan Phillippe), believes in the war and is committed to his comrades and getting them through safely. But after two tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, for which he’s been decorated for bravery, he’s ready to go home. After a parade welcoming him home to Brazos, Texas, Brandon is informed by a superior that he has been “stop-lossed,” or redeployed to Iraq, rather than being let go as originally planned.
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Brandon’s road-trip brings him face-to-face with the realities of his situation, from the disintegration of Steve and their fellow soldier Tommy (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) to the underground network of stop-lossed soldiers sneaking across the border to Canada, like the draft-dodgers of the Vietnam era.
Peirce brilliantly captured the lives of working-class Americans in her extraordinary debut feature “Boys Don’t Cry,” and she brings that same gift for unpretentious and non-condescending storytelling to “Stop-Loss.” And while none of the cast gives a performance as revelatory as Hilary Swank’s, Peirce taps into hitherto unseen depths from Phillippe and Tatum.
The movie was produced for MTV Films, and there are moments that feel like a concession to a young audience that might not want to see a movie about Iraq: Brandon and Steve both have post-traumatic stress disorder moments, but Brandon’s leaves him soaking wet (in a tight muscle shirt) while Steve wears only a pair of tighty-whities during his. Add to that a shooting-range scene that looks like a Bruce Weber spread for Abercrombie & Fitch, and the beefcake factor threatens to undo the film’s better intentions.
If audiences couldn’t be compelled to see powerful war-centric films like “In the Valley of Elah” or “No End in Sight,” it’ll be interesting to see if a photogenic cast and youth-focused story can sell tickets. But whatever you think about the Iraq war and the people who are fighting in it, you’ll be shaken up and moved by “Stop-Loss.”
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