Belfast Telegraph

Depression-era lust in the dust as boy meets girl on the run

- Dreamland is in selected cinemas

DREAMLAND

15, 98 mins Rating: 6/10

DOOMED lovers go on the run in Dreamland, an overly familiar tale of lust in the dust that owes some of its stylistic choices and hopeful romanticis­m to Terrence Malick’s Oscar-winning 1978 drama Days Of Heaven.

The sun beats down relentless­ly on director Miles JorisPeyra­fitte’s second picture, reducing the American dreams of Depression-era settlers to withered husks.

Any brave souls that remain place their faith in the words of the Lord and a liquor bottle.

Screenwrit­er Nicolaas Zwart uses the faded pastoral idyll as a weather-beaten backdrop to a meeting between a teenage boy, who has been starved of paternal affection, and a fugitive female bank robber.

Embers of desire ignite in the picture’s languid second half, which is dominated by a prolonged shower sex scene that operates effectivel­y as a demonstrat­ion video on water wastage.

Two-time Oscar nominee Margot Robbie discharges her undeniable star power, almost convincing us that she has feelings for Finn Cole’s infatuated youth when neither the script nor direction convincing­ly back up her teary-eyed outpouring­s.

A female narrator (Lola Kirke) recounts the story of Eugene Baker (Cole), who grows up in the Texas dustbowl with father John (Hans Christophe­r) and mother Olivia (Kerry Condon).

The old man leaves when Eugene is five, sending just one postcard from New Mexico after his angry night-time exodus.

Eugene grows into an awkward teenager, who escapes the unforgivin­g weather conditions by immersing himself in the detective magazines he steals from a local store with best friend Joe (Stephen Dinh).

During one of these sorties into town the boys learn that bank robber and murderer Allison Wells (Robbie) is at large in the state.

There is a $10,000 reward for her capture.

Soon afterwards Eugene stumbles upon the injured fugitive in the family’s barn and nervously removes a bullet from her thigh.

Allison paints herself as a victim of bad circumstan­ces and offers the boy $20,000 to steal a vehicle to get her to Mexico.

By aiding a bank robber, Eugene risks dire repercussi­ons for his mother, lawman stepfather George (Travis Fimmel) and little sister Phoebe (Darby Camp).

“This is the land of burden, kid. Now you get to pick yours,” coolly summarises Allison.

Dreamland lights up every time Robbie limps on screen, contradict­ing the narrator’s assertion that Eugene is the emotional linchpin of her oral history.

The 98-minute running time feels markedly longer but when the narrative does shift into second gear, an inevitable resolution is hurried.

 ??  ?? Margot Robbie as Allison Wells and Finn Cole as Eugene Evans
Margot Robbie as Allison Wells and Finn Cole as Eugene Evans

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