Showing posts with label kodi smit-mcphee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kodi smit-mcphee. Show all posts

August 17, 2018

Alpha

Rin Tin Tin Revenant

Grade: C +
Director: Albert Hughes
Starring: Kodi Smit-McPhee, Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson, and Jens Hultén
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Running Time: 1 hr. 36 min.

A film that lends new meaning to the dog days of summer movies, Alpha is set in Europe 20,000 years ago near the end of the last Ice Age and supposes to tell a tale about advent of the relationship between man and man’s best friend. Ultimately, however, this Paleolithic parable is an unmemorable journey to an inevitable end.

Keda (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is the son of his Cro-Magnon tribe’s chief, Tau (Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson). Keda is a sensitive sort, reluctant to even slit the throat of a wild boar, a long ways from one day becoming his tribe’s alpha. While out hunting Steppe bison, Keda is gored and tossed over the edge of a cliff, landing unconscious on an inaccessible ledge. Assuming his son is dead, a grief-stricken Tau erects a memorial and leaves Keda for the vultures. But Keda awakens, and despite a broken ankle, he embarks on an odyssey home through Mother Nature’s obstacles. One danger comes from a pack of wolves that see Keda as an easy snack. Keda knifes the leader, causing the others to scatter. Instead of killing the Canis lupus, Keda nurses it back to health, thereby forging a symbiotic bond as both boy and beast help each other cope with threats from predators and the encroaching winter.

It’s The Revenant meets Rin Tin Tin, and the story feels every bit as derivative. Director Albert Hughes (one-half of the erstwhile Hughes brothers filmmaking team) tries to infuse the film with a sense of gritty realism, including using an unidentifiable pre-civilization language with subtitles. But the sweeping landscapes and even Keda’s wolf are enhanced with a distracting amount of CGI that erdoes the verisimilitude.

Alpha merits an A for ambition, but its execution feels like one long slog through the snow. By the time Keda and his canine reach their trail’s end, the audience will like the ones lost in the wilderness.

December 17, 2009

The Road

Okay, where the heck did we park the car?



Grade: B

Starring: Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron, and Robert Duvall

MPAA Rating: R

Running Time: 1 hour, 51 minutes


Can an otherwise well-made film be so bleak that it ceases to be a good movie?


During the days – even weeks – it takes for the haunting, gripping film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road to slowly seep into its audiences’ psyches, it becomes more than incidental to wonder whether misery might be a qualitative factor on which to judge a film’s merit, not merely a narrative device whose sole utility for prospective viewers is to help decide if a particular motion picture is their “kind of movie.”


The answer rests on whether such gloom and desolation are integral to story’s setting and spirit. In the case of McCarthy’s 2006 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel (published the year after his No Country For Old Men), how else to depict the collapse of civilization and the end of nearly all life on Earth? Apocalyptic pap like 2012 and I Am Legend sell more tickets because people prefer their despair and anguish packaged as neutered, stylized escapism rather than anything approaching grim reality. By contrast, to portray The Road’s fictional post-apocalyptic landscape, director John Hillcoat shot scenes atop Mount St. Helens in Washington, run-down parts of Pittsburgh, and New Orleans neighborhoods ravaged by Hurricane Katrina.


The crux of McCarthy’s text – and, in turn, Joe Penhall’s faithful screenplay – is not explaining or even showing the cataclysmic inferno that destroys nearly all the world’s plant and animal life. The closest director John Hillcoat comes are flashbacks to flickering reflections cast against the horrified faces of a Man (Viggo Mortensen, tremendous) and his Wife (Charlize Theron) (all the characters are nameless in the book and film).


Instead, the story focuses on the survival of the Man and his Boy (Kodi Smit-McPhee), born post-apocalypse, an odyssey that embodies the dual meaning of the film’s title. Their arduous journey to the coast in search of food, shelter, safety, and possibly other survivors carries them along treacherous highways and byways teeming with bandits and gangs of cannibals – even a feeble Old Man (Robert Duvall) is a source of potential danger. Seemingly abandoned houses hold the promise of uneaten foodstuff…or ghoulish cellars stocked with emaciated humans being harvested limb by limb. The Man saves his two remaining bullets so he can quickly kill himself and his son rather than allowing them to be captured and suffer unspeakable horrors.


Moreover, their trek suggests mankind’s path to rebirth and redemption. The Wife begged to abort her child rather than bring him into such a hellish world. The Man’s drive to survive is not motivated by strict self-preservation, but rather both his paternal instinct and the notion that his Boy’s life and innocence represent our only hope for a better future.


Where Hillcoat falters is that by delving so deeply – however understandable – into the dark recesses of man’s nature, he buries that sense of hope under a mountain of cynicism. Hillcoat displays a keen command of craft, setting, and atmosphere, as he did in his previous film, the similarly austere The Proposition. But, both films wait until their closing scenes to offer any reason for enduring optimism (each by virtue of acts performed by characters played by Guy Pearce, ironically).


Yet, this is not a reason to totally discount the film’s audacious viewpoint, striking production value, and fine cast, particularly Mortensen and Smit-McPhee. Despair is the toll you must pay to travel The Road. Still, it’s a trip worth taking.


Neil Morris