Deccan Chronicle

A seering survival drama

- SUDARSHAN RAMANI

Agroup of huntertrap­pers are attacked by the Ree native tribes, whose chief (Duane Howard) is seeking to rescue his daughter. Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio), Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy), Andrew Henry (Domhnall Gleeson) and Glass’ son Hawk (Forrest Goodluck) escape overland, leaving behind the valuable animal pelt. Glass is attacked by a bear and left in the care of Fitzgerald who hates him. Eventually, he’s betrayed and left for dead. A wounded and maimed Glass somehow finds the will to survive in the harsh mountainou­s cold and embarks on a long quest for vengeance.

The Revenant is a film that has carried a great deal of rumours of the harsh conditions of its production — much of the film is shot on location with natural light (excellent work by Emmanuel Lubezki) — with Leonardo DiCaprio and the cast working in harsh conditions. Watching the film, one can see the physicalit­y and visceral sense of nature in the film.

The film is a fictionali­sed account of the real-life adventures of Glass. It adds a halfnative son of Glass into the mix which, I suppose, adds greater texture to the settler-native relations that inform the back- ground of the film. But on the whole, this is closer to Apocalypto rather than The New World. It’s about the nuts and bolts of survival. It’s all about patchwork shelter, narrow caves and makeshift bandages. One image has Glass cauterisin­g his wound by setting fire to his neck. The amount of pain, endurance and torment is unbelievab­le.

The approach taken by the film towards the story seems flawed in a couple of instances, chiefly cutting away from DiCaprio to a separate strand concerning other characters. The story also has speeches on the persecutio­n of Native Americans that seem a little preachy and director Alejandro González Iñárritu makes the mistake that any filmmaker focusing on fixed location narratives makes, i.e., to burden events with vignettes — in this case a community of French trappers. This time last year, Angelina Jolie’s film, Unbroken, told another true story of a man surviving impossible ordeals but it refused to pare down its relentless focus on the character.

The Revenant is mainly a spectacle of sound, image and vast unforgivin­g landscapes. This allows the film to paper over the weaknesses of the story and direction. The visceral sequences: Glass hiding underneath an animal skin to protect himself from winter; his halting and hesitant interactio­ns with other strangers on the frontier are powerful images.

The unforgetta­ble bear attack scene is an incredible sequence; performanc­es by Leonardo DiCaprio, Domhnall Gleeson and, especially, Duane Howard (as the moving Ree Chief, who gets an amazing close-up in a powerful early scene) are equally rivet- ing. This is one of DiCaprio’s most intense roles.

The Revenant is a terrific bigscreen experience. It is a film about the environmen­t and the kind of impact it can have on individual­s, with characters resorting to violence, slaughter and betrayal under its influence. There are repeated images of various characters being scalped, practiced by both white men and natives, and the violence on offer, while never gratuitous, is still quite hard to take in many scenes.

It is to the film’s credit that it has a sense of ambiguity about whether there is anything truly separating the film’s heroes, villains and innocents. Perhaps the only truly noble character in the film is the bear that attacked Glass to protect her cubs. The writer is programmer,

Lightcube Film Society

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 ??  ?? Best Picture Best Actor in a Leading Role Best Actor in a Supporting Role Best Cinematogr­aphy Best Costume Design
Best Directing Best Film Editing Best Makeup and Hairstylin­g Best Production Design Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing
Best Visual...
Best Picture Best Actor in a Leading Role Best Actor in a Supporting Role Best Cinematogr­aphy Best Costume Design Best Directing Best Film Editing Best Makeup and Hairstylin­g Best Production Design Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing Best Visual...

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