Stop-Loss

The bravest place to stand is by each other's side.

6.1
20081h 53m

A veteran soldier returns from his completed tour of duty in Iraq, only to find his life turned upside down when he is arbitrarily ordered to return to field duty by the Army.

Production

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Logo for Paramount Pictures
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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Stop-Loss - Trailer

Stop-Loss - Trailer

Thumbnail for video: AWOL

AWOL

Thumbnail for video: 'Stop-Loss' | Critics' Picks | The New York Times

'Stop-Loss' | Critics' Picks | The New York Times

Cast

Photo of Ryan Phillippe

Ryan Phillippe

Brandon King

Photo of Channing Tatum

Channing Tatum

Steve Shriver

Photo of Josef Sommer

Josef Sommer

Senator Orton Worrell

Photo of Timothy Olyphant

Timothy Olyphant

Lieutenant Colonel Boot Miller

Photo of Linda Emond

Linda Emond

Ida King

Photo of Steven Strait

Steven Strait

Michael Colson

Photo of Rob Brown

Rob Brown

Isaac 'Eyeball' Butler

Photo of Victor Rasuk

Victor Rasuk

Rico Rodriguez

Photo of Cory Hart

Cory Hart

Cowboy

Photo of Richard Dillard

Richard Dillard

Sheriff Boudreaux

Photo of James D. Dever

James D. Dever

Captain Dever

Photo of Mark Richard

Mark Richard

Pastor Colson

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6.5/10

Extended Enlistment.

Kimberley Peirce’s (Boys Don’t Cry) movie proved to be controversial in military circles. The story is about the stop-loss procedure used by the American military, a kind of small print tactic that can extend a soldiers service should their country deem it so. Sergeant Brandon King (Ryan Phillippe) returns home from the Gulf Wars with his mentally scarred pals fully expecting to get back to a domestic life without blood and brains dominating his personal landscape. Yet he is called back in for another tour of Iraq under the stop-loss procedure, something he rebels against and goes AWOL. He has done two tours already, surely he has earned his retirement?

It starts off in electrified fashion, the horrors of the war in Iraq bursting from the screen as a firefight ensues, character traits are introduced to us, we are left in no doubt that the soldiers at the end of this tour of duty have seen it all. Pic then settles into a sort of cross between a road movie and a PTSD portrait awash with emotional strangulation. Peirce and her co-writer Mark Richard have honourable intentions, but too much is given over to stereotyping, of stock clichés and the bold signposting of character’s futures. They carefully paint King as a model soldier, this is definitely not about cowardice, but come the cop-out finale it’s evident that the narrative suffers glaring inconsistencies and confused messaging.

On the bonus side is the performances of the youthful cast, where some fluctuating accents aside, Phillippe, Channing Tatum and Abbie Cornish are superb, while Joseph Gordon-Levitt makes a weakly written part crackle with pained emotion. Of the elders, most are underwritten, which is a shame when you got the likes of Ciaran Hinds in the cast. We are left as a whole with a film that is as uneven as a dusty road in Tikrit, not only in narrative structure, but also in actual facts as regards the procedures of the American military, both on the written documents and execution of duty in battle.

It was a flop at the American box-office and it’s not hard to see why, but it still has merits. Even as the familiarity tries to breed contempt, the anguished reality of a soldiers life, during tours and post service time, strikes a mightily distressing chord. 6.5/10

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