The Descendants is such a neatly-intertwined and bittersweet story that it has deeply touched my heart strings. Just as Matt King said, though tourists tend to associate Hawaii with just happiness and peace, life is every bit as real and cruel in Hawaii as it is anywhere else. The story starts with the tragic boat accident of Matt King’s wife Elizabeth. Instead of turning into a cheesy and melodramatic story which reminisces about the perfect and sweet life of the Kings, the movie told the audience the hard truth of this family. Matt’s life is a mess besides the fact that Elizabeth was about to die. His marriage with Elizabeth was going through crisis since Matt was often out working and paid little attention to his wife. What Alexandra later told Matt only made it worse for Matt to handle. He realized that Elizabeth cheated on him, and was about to ask him for a divorce if the accident did not happen. His teenage daughter Alexandra is going through a rebellious phase, and as to the younger one, Scottie, Matt sometimes does not even understand her.
It would be so much easier for Matt if his life has always been like this, but the truth is that he used to be so close with his wife and his girls, and they used to be happy together. Just as Matt said, family is like an archipelago, all parts of the same whole, but still separate and alone and always drifting slowly apart. When I almost start to believe that the theme of the movie is about how to accept the hard truth of family, things took a turn when Alexandra told Matt about Elizabeth’s affair. It turned out that the reason why Alexandra fought with Elizabeth all the time is that she felt sorry for Matt. Later, when Alexandra assisted Matt in finding and confronting Brian Speer, her love and loyalty to Matt was so sweet, and the interaction between Matt and Alexandra was so natural that one could be convinced that blood is thicker than water, and the tie between family members is invisible yet strong.
What amazing about this film is that besides the plot of the reconciliation between family members, it also manages to tell the story between the land and people. But in some sense, the land actually symbolizes the heritage and tradition of the ancestors. Matt may not know his ancestors, but as he gazed through the pictures of them on the wall, he must have realized that there are some unsaid connections between the past and the present, between the forefathers and his children, between the land and his family, so he decided to keep the land. At the end of the movie, Matt and his daughters said goodbye to Elizabeth, and they were sitting on the sofa together and sharing a bucket of ice cream. At that point I believed that his family never really drifted apart.