Saturday, February 6, 2016
The Revenant
Score: **** out of ***** (A-)
Directed by Alejandro G. Inarritu
Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hardy, Domhnall Gleeson
Running time: 156 minutes
Rated R
Long Story Short: The Revenant is a wilderness revenge tale, director Inarritu's follow-up to his Best Picture-winning Birdman. DiCaprio drives the action in an extraordinary physical performance in harsh conditions, allowing the audience to get a sense of his trials. And the film is beautifully made, all shot on location by a virtuoso cinematographer. There isn't much story or character drama to it all, but it's such an impressive visual event that it's still well worth seeing.
In the 19th century, skilled hunter and tracker Hugh Glass (DiCaprio) guides a party of fur trappers in the wild, cold frontier of the Dakotas. While Glass hunts, the camp is attacked and overrun by a tribe of native Americans; only a handful of survivors, including Glass, his half-native son Hawk, and Captain Henry (Gleeson), escape down a river on their boat. Glass goes against the wishes of many of the men in insisting they abandon the boat and try to get to the safety of Fort Kiowa by foot. The captain takes his advice, but before long Glass is savagely mauled while scouting ahead. The others stabilize and carry him, but the natives are still in pursuit and so Captain Henry offers a reward to two men to continue carrying Glass until he dies, while the others go on ahead.
Fear and personal reasons soon leads one of the men, Fitzgerald (Hardy) to betray his promise, and Glass is left for dead, even partially buried. But the experienced, resourceful Glass is not yet ready to give up, and finds a powerful new drive in his desire for revenge. From his grievous wounds to the bitter cold to the prowling natives, Glass faces a formidable challenge just to survive, but none of it can bend his will.
The Revenant has a small but effective cast, with familiar faces literally thrown into the wild. Leonardo DiCaprio is the lead as Hugh Glass, and his performance is deserving of the Oscar he has been nominated for. It is a physically arduous role, as the film was shot entirely on location; while it may have helped DiCaprio capture the grueling nature of his predicament, it was surely quite difficult. There isn't much character depth here (more on this later), but the sheer relentlessness and drive evident in his performance is very impressive. Tom Hardy is the "villain" Fitzgerald, who leaves Glass behind. This type of role seems to suit Hardy quite well (The Dark Knight Rises) and he is easy to root against, as well as quite menacing in his fierce individualism. But he is also the worst culprit in an overall trend - it's difficult to understand what he is saying, especially early on. You thought his Bane was hard to make out? This was much harder for me. There are some supporting roles, most recognizably Domhnall Gleeson as the trapper Captain, but none particularly stand out.
The Revenant, a wilderness revenge tale inspired by true events, has both some great strengths as well as weaker elements that hold it back. The filmmaking itself - the very images on screen - is outstanding, which is particularly rewarding within the setting of a story like this. It is beautiful from the very first frames, of simple dark, running water through a forest, continuing through the use of only natural light and so on. The camera work is very intimate, almost always right up close to the characters (particularly Leo's Glass) which pulls the audience into the experience. It's not surprising the quality, considering it's cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, who also did the stunning work on Children of Men, Gravity, and Inarritu's Birdman. The action is inventively done and exciting, such as the native American attacks which provide a sense of chaos. And of course, the mauling scene with incredibly realistic CGI beast, so real that I kind of felt bad for it when Glass finally manages to off it. As pure scene-to-scene imagery and interest go, The Revenant is a superbly made film.
However, The Revenant is not particularly engaging on just about any other terms. The story is a simple one, and depends on the audience sympathizing with either Glass' "background" attachment to the deceased mother of his half-native son, and/or rooting for Glass to get revenge on Fitzgerald. I didn't think either one was effective. The wife-son element seemed generic to me and yet distracting at times to the better parts of the film; and there's so much focus on Glass just surviving (quite understandably) that revenge seems like an afterthought. The film is also just too long, even if it is visually interesting throughout. Watching Glass survive in the wilderness is the strength of the film... but even that starts to lose its impact over time.
***
Thanks to the strength of the filmmaking, The Revenant is a very good film, a nice way to start the year in film for 2016. Along with Leo's impressive physical performance, it's probably deserving of its Oscar nominations. Quite simply, I'm not sure I can think of a more visually-engaging and -dazzling film in recent years, and following Glass' journey provides a sense of both the exciting and the grinding nature of his struggle. But with very little behind that, to me it is an impressive technical accomplishment more than a great film. It would be a big mistake, in my opinion, if this won Best Picture over Spotlight or The Big Short; even co-star Hardy's other nominee, Mad Max, is a more well-rounded film. Still, if you can stomach some intense violence (or at least turn away when it comes up), then The Revenant is certainly worth seeing, especially on the big screen.
By Source, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=48337450
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