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6 Great Movies About Brotherly Love

The relationship between brothers, or siblings in general, is a difficult thing to capture in words. I come from a family with three brothers. Brotherly bonds have all the masculine tensions and complications of a father-son dynamic, but with subtler power hierarchies. In other words, you’ve got the manly competitiveness and bravado and culturally-formed inability to articulate feelings with a less clear master and student rapport. It’s also not explored as much by the psychologically curious such as Sigmund Freud. It doesn’t get a whole lot of attention. But that only makes it more interesting when movies look closely at how brothers function with and against each other, when the subject is handled with skill and depth.

[h2]3) The Darjeeling Limited[/h2]

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Before he put out Moonrise Kingdom last year, I think The Darjeeling Limited may have been Wes Anderson’s sweetest film. It features not two brothers, but three, played by Owen Wilson, Adrien Brody and Jason Schwartzmann, on a train trek across India to reunite with each other and eventually their mother. It has all the usual quirks of a Wes Anderson movie that many find charming and deliciously strange and others find utterly grating. That template applies to Darjeeling to an extent, with its typical Anderson framing and bright color palette and pithy dialogue, but I found this one to be less detached than most of his other work.

Part of this may be the spiritual aspect, which I think is meant somewhat ironically but also possesses some actual meaning. It’s as if it takes the position of “of course this is all silly and absurd, but maybe there’s something to it and either way it’s a nice way to think about things for a moment.” The things these brothers experience together on this train are presented in a way that indicates a shared history, as though these new experiences are just the newest of many they’ve had together. It comes full circle in the end, when their visit with their mother results in a repeat of past events. The movie also nicely portrays the lies families tell each other and the baseless fears members will have of others finding out the truth. Also, a real nifty soundtrack.

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