My largest complaint was the overblown father-son theme as well, but most significantly with Jeffrey Wright and obligatory drunken father.Andre Jurieu wrote:I also don't see the point of all the father-son conflicts that constantly distract from the central issue and I'm not exactly sure what we are supposed to take from Matt Damon almost getting blown to pieces and then returning to his family. So, wealthy white business-folk will finally understand the cost of our dependence upon oil once they lose a son and nearly get reduced to a Saudi sand-trap? Realistically, couldn't his conscience have been "cleansed" another way? Actually, I'm not even sure he learned anything from the experience.
The Damon homecoming scene really hit me, though. I know that there was a certain sense of defeatism in all the storylines, but when Damon locked eyes with his wife, my heart sunk in that 'why bother' kind of way. It was one thing for Wright to make the compromises he did or for Clooney and Nassir to die face to face at the hands of the U.S. because they all had their hands already slightly dirty. But Damon's was a loss of innocence in a sense. That upset me, which I believe was Gaghan's intent.
-Toilet Dcuk