| Stop-Loss | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Kimberly Peirce |
| Written by | Kimberly Peirce Mark Richard |
| Produced by | Gregory Goodman Scott Rudin |
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Chris Menges |
| Edited by | Claire Simpson |
| Music by | John Powell |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 112 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $25 million |
| Box office | $11.2 million |
Stop-Loss is a 2008 Americanwardrama film directed byKimberly Peirce and starringRyan Phillippe,Channing Tatum,Abbie Cornish andJoseph Gordon-Levitt as young soldiers whose experience in theIraq War leaves them psychologically shattered. It was distributed byParamount Pictures and produced byMTV Films. The film received mixed reviews,[1] and earned less than half of its $25 million production budget at the box office. The title refers to the U.S. government's controversialstop-loss policy, which allows the government to extend the term of duty for soldiers who have already served their contracted number of years of service.
U.S. ArmyStaff Sergeant Brandon King's squad is operating inTikrit during theIraq War. During an ambush, several soldiers are killed; PFC Tommy Burgess is saved when Private Rico Rodriguez blocks him from an attack and is severely wounded in the process. Brandon is disturbed when he enters a house to save Sergeant Steve Shriver and accidentally kills Iraqi civilians after throwing a grenade at an insurgent.
Back home inBrazos, Texas, Brandon and Steve receive the Bronze Star and Purple Heart in a solemn ceremony. Steve'spost-traumatic stress disorder manifests when he gets blackout drunk, strips and digs a foxhole in his yard, thinking he's still back in Iraq, and strikes his fiancée and Brandon's childhood friend, Michelle. Tommy is also struggling, becoming reliant on alcohol, and his wife kicks him out. He stays with Brandon at his family's ranch in the meantime.
Expecting their discharges, Brandon, Tommy and Steve report to their military base. Tommy and Steve are discharged but Brandon is dismayed to learn that he has been ordered back to active duty in Iraq under the military's controversial stop-loss policy requiring discharged soldiers to return to war when the country needs more soldiers. Angry and believing he paid his dues, he refuses to comply and goesAWOL.
Michelle accompanies Brandon on the road trip to Washington, D.C. to ask a senator for help. However, the government won't help fugitives. Brandon's own PTSD begins to manifest as he has hallucinations of his fellow soldiers' bodies. He encounters another AWOL soldier who points him to a lawyer that can provide forged documents for a new identity in Canada. He also visits Rodriguez, nowblinded and disfigured, missing limbs from the attack. Steve arrives in uniform to take Brandon back, and admits that he volunteered to return to Iraq, believing it gives him purpose. Furious that Steve re-enlisted after waiting five years to marry him, Michelle ends their relationship. Brandon and Michelle meet the lawyer in New York to obtain the forged passport.
Tommy,depressed after his discharge, commitssuicide by shooting himself. Brandon returns home to visit Tommy's grave after the funeral. Both he and Steve are shaken by Tommy's death and physically fight at the cemetery, as Steve blames Brandon for leaving them when Steve had asked him to come back to help Tommy. At theMexican border, Brandon changes his mind, deciding that he doesn't want to abandon his family and life and knows the war will follow him.
The film ends with a shot of a busload of soldiers returning to the war, including Brandon and Steve, who sit together.
Principal photography began in August 2006 inMorocco and various locations in Texas –Austin,Lockhart,San Antonio andUhland.[2][3]
The film was released on DVD on July 8, 2008.[4]
Rotten Tomatoes reports a 64% approval rating, based on 143 reviews, with an average rating of 6.27/10 and the consensus: "Stop-Loss is sincere and complex, and features strong performances, even if it tries to cover too much ground."[5]Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 61 out of 100, based on 35 reviews.[1]The film was one of a string of films about the Iraq War released in the 2006-2009 period with titles such as;Home of the Brave byIrwin Winkler,Rendition byGavin Hood,Redacted byBrian De Palma,In the Valley of Elah byPaul Haggis andThe Messenger byOren Moverman, all of which fared poorly at the box office and all of which, besidesIn the Valley of Elah andThe Messenger, received middling critical reviews.[6][7]James Berardinelli described the film as "preachy, simplistic and uninteresting", and cited it as no more effective than the other recent Iraq war films 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."[8]Peter Travers felt thatStop Loss "touches greatness" despite what he called "a curse hanging over it", and "has the juice to break the jinx."[6]
The film was abox office bomb. In its opening weekend, it grossed a mere $4.5 million in 1,291 theaters in theUnited States andCanada, ranking #8 at the box office.[9][10] 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.[11] The film had an estimated budget of $25 million and only grossed $11 million worldwide, less than half of its budget.[12]