Film Review of the Week: Labor Day

A fantastic actress who's still at the tom of her game, Kate Winslet has the ability to turn a bad movie into a good one. But even she can't redeem Jason Reitman's new film Labor Day. The film opens areawide on Friday. Okay, so Winslet was nominated for a Golden Globe for her role here as a single mom struggling to raise her 13-year-old son in a small rural town where she falls for an escaped convict. But her performance doesn't save the film, which oscillates between drama and thriller and never really successfully works as either.

Early in the film, we quickly realize the emotionally unstable Adele (Winslet) has trouble taking care of life's simplest tasks. She sends her son Henry (Gattlin Griffith) to make deposits at the bank. She struggles to put her car in reverse and back out of the driveway. She panics if her son leaves her at the grocery store to look at comic books. Her hands shake. She's obviously dealing with some kind of trauma (we later learn exactly what happened to make her such a nervous wreck). Casting Winslet in this role was a good decision. She plays the part perfectly and shows just enough cleavage to be sexy despite her insecurities.

One day while she and Henry are shopping, a burly, goateed man (Josh Brolin) approaches Henry and insists he give him a ride. He seems sinister. Turns out, he is. Dude has just escaped from prison. He was having his appendix removed and rather than stick around for it to properly heal, he hopped through the window and ran. The stitches are still bleeding and he hobbles a bit as he walks. Adele and Henry don't realize who he is right away but after hearing local news reports and seeing the roadblocks, they quickly figure out that Frank is the guy the local cops are after.

Frank makes them take him back to their home where he plans to hide out for the long Labor Day weekend and wait for the trains to start running again. Though Frank ties up Adele (he maintains he doesn't want her getting in trouble for being an accomplice), he doesn't seem like such a bad guy. He's an excellent cook and he can make a pretty damn good pie. He teaches Henry how to throw and catch a baseball and then helps him work on his swing. He fixes stuff around the house and changes the oil on the car. Suddenly, harboring a convicted killer doesn't seem so bad. During a weirdly intense pie-baking scene, things heat up between him and Adele, putting poor Henry in an awkward position.

Keeping Frank a secret proves to be problematic, especially when nosy neighbors keep stopping by without advance warning. One neighbor even has Adele watch her autistic kid for a day. Frank treats the kid with unrivaled kindness (and almost gets caught as a result). He also has a close call when the local cop (James Van Der Beek) follows Henry home one day and asks a number of probing questions that suggest he might be onto them.

So Frank and Adele make plans to get the hell out of Dodge. Though they plan to take Henry with them, they don't realize that the young man has fallen for the brash Mandy (Maika Monroe) who has just moved to town. When Henry hints that he might be harboring Frank, she finds it exciting and likens his mother and Frank to Bonnie and Clyde.

But Frank and Adele are no Bonnie and Clyde. In fact, the chemistry between Brolin and Winslet is so tepid, it's hard to even tell they're in love. While Reitman's previous film, 2009's Up in the Air, a film about a traveling company executive who fires people, spoke to issues of corporate greed and really hit a nerve, Labor Day doesn't carry the same gravitas. It's hard to believe the same director could have made both movies.

Perhaps the source material — the film is based on Joyce Maynard's novel — is to blame. But Reitman adapted Maynard's book and wrote the screenplay so he's the real culprit here. The film doesn't fully explore subplots about Henry's coming-of-age or Frank's past, the latter of which is depicted through a series of flashbacks. And Reitman even rushes the unsatisfactory ending which features a brief appearance by Tobey Maguire, who plays Henry when he's all grown up.

Like this story?
SCENE Supporters make it possible to tell the Cleveland stories you won’t find elsewhere.
Become a supporter today.

Jeff Niesel

Jeff has been covering the Cleveland music scene for more than 20 years now. And on a regular basis, he tries to talk to whatever big acts are coming through town, too. If you're in a band that he needs to hear, email him at [email protected].
Scroll to read more Movie Reviews & Stories articles

Join Cleveland Scene Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.