Geelong Advertiser

Alpha better find home

- LEIGH PAATSCH

ALPHA Starring: Kodi Smit-McPhee, Johannes Haukur Johannesso­n, Natassia Malthe.

What you live is what you pet LONG before dogs had their day — some 20,000 years ago, to be exact — another species had an impressive tryout for the job of man’s best friend.

This is the story of a hardy Arctic wolf named Alpha, and how she buddied-up big-time with Keda (Australian star Kodi Smit-McPhee), the only son of the chief of a nomadic tribe.

On his very first hunting expedition, Keda gets on the wrong side of a rampaging pack of bison and takes a tumble over a ledge.

Presumed dead and bereft of most key survival skills, Keda is facing an impossibly epic journey home — until a chance encounter with the kindly and clever Alpha.

What follows is a stark, yet stunningly mounted adventure odyssey, wherein the boy and the wolf must meld minds to elude the dangers of a nature continuall­y conspiring against them.

Despite the movie’s unconventi­onal structure — there is very little spoken dialogue, and what do you hear needs to be further decoded with the aid of subtitles — it remains a curiously involving affair from start to finish.

Plaudits must go to McPhee for his excellent anchoring performanc­e, particular­ly in Alpha’s opening act, which amounts to his only real opportunit­y to graft some much-needed character developmen­t on to his role as Keda.

His interactio­ns with other members of the tribe are the most telling, setting up how we perceive Keda will fare when facing the world on his own.

His mother (Natassia Malthe) has reservatio­ns about Keda being ready for the tribe’s big group hunt, observing her son “leads with his heart, not his spear”.

However, Keda’s hardheaded father Tau (Johannes Haukur Johannesso­n), is of the belief that “life is only for the strong”.

The sooner his son learns this, the better equipped Keda will be to one day lead the tribe in his own right.

Once Keda is forced to go solo, Smit-McPhee’s sole costar for the rest of the movie steps into frame with some remarkably expressive support work.

In the role of Alpha, a very well-trained Czech wolfhound named Chuck exudes a noble empathy not often detected in animal performers.

Younger viewers (boys in particular) will effortless­ly plug into the Alpha experience on an easy-to-follow, coming-ofIce-Age level.

Older onlookers won’t mind it either as a shorter, sweeter version of The Revenant — minus the murders and revenge killings, of course!

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 ??  ?? SURVIVAL MODE: Aussie Kodi Smit-McPhee and Arctic wolf Alpha in a scene from Alpha.
SURVIVAL MODE: Aussie Kodi Smit-McPhee and Arctic wolf Alpha in a scene from Alpha.

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