To his credit, director Lawrence Kasdan makes his new movie impossible to pigeonhole. Grand Canyon is less slick and infinitely more ambitious than his own Big Chill. The script -- by the director and his wife, Meg Kasdan -- encompasses crime, racism, homelessness, an earthquake, Felliniesque dreams and problems ranging from making a left turn in L.A. to finding the meaning of life. Some of this is indigestible. It's a tossup as to which is harder to take -- a street prophet advising Claire to "keep the baby" or Claire's sanctimonious yuppie angst. Then there are shots of a police chopper that draw unfortunate comparisons to John Singleton's much grittier and truer Boyz n the Hood.
It helps that the actors are splendid. Glover exudes strength and charm; his romance with Jane (the marvelous Alfre Woodard) has an unforced urgency. And Martin is potently funny. Veering from religious conversion (words like "doth" creep into his conversation) to a fierce defense of splatter films, he's a bracing deflator of hypocrisy. Grand Canyon is most gripping when Kasdan shows people waking up to the world and finding that they need more than bromides -- the kind doled out in The Prince of Tides -- to deal with the chaos of urban life.
PETER TRAVERS
RS 622
(Posted: Feb 13, 2001)
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