Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes’ true love first blossomed poetically on screen. Gosling often defines his performances through understatement, from a vintage heartthrob in The Notebook to a brooding protector in what this author thinks is the best film ever, Drive, while still featuring in blockbusters like the pink phenomenon, Barbie. Mendes, now happily embracing the beauty of motherhood and entrepreneurship, also dedicated herself to acting, delving into roles like the complicated mistress of Denzel Washington’s character in Training Day to a cynical gossip columnist in Hitch, showing she also had the range to tackle both dramatic and comedic contexts.
However, there’s a strong case that their finest work came when they shared the screen in the same movie: Derek Cianfrance’s 2012 morality tale The Place Beyond the Pines. The ambitious, multi-generational film brought the couple together off-screen while testing the actors with roles that demanded intensity. In this atmospheric exploration of family, fate, and consequences, Gosling and Mendes delivered the best performances of their careers.
‘The Place Beyond the Pines’ Is a Chain Reaction
Director Cianfrance’s masterpiece sits in three distinct parts, tracing the ripple effects of fate across decades and families. In a gutsy move that paid off, it doesn’t follow a conventional narrative structure. The film shifts protagonists, first following Luke Glanton (Gosling), a motorcycle stunt rider turned bank robber, then rookie cop Avery Cross (Bradley Cooper), who is wrestling with corruption, before finally exploring both the intertwined destiny of Luke and Avery’s sons 15 years later.
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Luke discovers he has a son with a former lover, Romina (Mendes), and he’s desperate to provide for them, so he begins robbing banks. During one ill-fated heist, Avery shoots and kills Luke and is shot in the leg by him in return, becoming an unlikely hero struggling with his conscious. Down the line in high school, Luke’s son Jason (Dale DeHann) and Avery’s son AJ (Emory Cohen) drift towards friendship, unaware of their fathers’ connection. Jason discovers the truth about how their fathers’ paths crossed, and the cycle of violence threatens to repeat itself as he confronts Avery, who’s now a prominent politician. Deep Focus Review said, “Cianfrance never allows his viewers to escape the heartbreak of his film, consuming us with a resounding feeling of sorrow over these characters and the way their lives set paths for one another.”
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A Cast That’s Perfectly in Sync
Cianfrance’s visual approach complements the storytelling, with cinematographer Sean Bobbitt capturing Schenectady’s faded industrial landscape through long, fluid tracking shots. In an opening sequence to rival the best, a single take follows Gosling through a carnival to his motorcycle cage, instantly establishing the film’s technical prowess. The Guardian said, “It’s subtly photographed by the American-born British cinematographer Sean Bobbitt, who did such an immaculate job on Steve McQueen’s Hunger and Shame, and here he gives each of the sections an appropriately distinctive look.”
The cast’s chemistry is finely tuned, where supporting roles gently elevate the material. Avery’s wife, Jennifer (Rose Byrne), is always thinking, always on the edge; the downright awful Deluca (Ray Liotta) embodies institutional corruption, Kofi (Mahershala Ali) provides a moral counterweight as Mendes’ partner, and mechanic Robin’s (Ben Mendelssohn) weathered demeanor holds moral ambiguity, all adding texture to the film.
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A Dual Performance at the Heart of ‘Place Beyond the Pines’
Focus Features
Gosling’s Luke is a man torn between outlaw instincts and newfound paternal responsibility, balancing explosive violence with quiet vulnerability, particularly when he cradles his baby son. The fairground opening sequence, introducing his bleached hair and tattooed face, shows his charisma, and later moments with Mendes showcase raw desperation beneath his stoic exterior. Akin to his role in Drive but with much more ambiguity, Gosling communicates primarily through his physicality, especially his glances and gestures, creating a character who’s simultaneously dangerous and sympathetic.
Mendes delivers career-best work as beautiful Romina, a tired working mother wanting the best for her child while navigating impossible choices. She imbues Romina with independence and emotional complexity. Like Gosling, her most powerful moments — refusing Luke’s money, conflicted reactions to his attempts at fatherhood and her silent grief — also don’t rely on dialogue but expressions that reveal her internal struggle. Mendes finds dignity in Romina’s difficult choices, portraying a woman who protects her son while honoring complicated feelings.
Together, Gosling and Mendes generate authenticity in their brief scenes. Their characters’ unresolved tension, a mix of attraction, resentment, and shared history, feels palpably real. Cianfrance’s improvisational directing style captured genuine moments, and, unlike real-life couples whose on-screen pairings may feel manufactured, their performances achieve a sensual quality that grounds the film’s narrative in convincing reality.
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A lesson in chemistry
Focus Features
Focus Features
Gosling and Mendes share precious little screen time in The Place Beyond the Pines, but their real-life romance, which began during filming, seeps through into their performances and interactions. Gosling spoke to GQ about falling for Mendes and proclaimed, “We were pretending to be a family, and I didn’t really want to pretend anymore.” Cianfrance’s preference for long takes and natural dialogue captures honest moments between them, such as their farewell scene, with its mix of longing and resignation, conveying years of attachment and regret through glances, ranking among cinema’s most believable portrayals of former lovers.
Gosling went on to even bigger success with La La Land and Barbie and Mendes pressed pause on acting to focus on the children. Their work in The Place Beyond The Pines remains their purest artistic achievement, a document of two soulmates creating something genuinely affecting.
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