The Daily Telegraph

Search for solitude touches the soul

Leave No Trace

- Tim Robey FILM CRITIC

PG cert, 110 min Dir Debra Granik Starring Ben Foster, Thomasin Mckenzie, Jeff Kober, Dale Dickey

Disappeari­ng in America has got to be easier than in most places, and yet it’s a perpetual problem for the father and daughter in Leave No Trace. This pair have nothing to escape from, except a society with which they feel no kinship. They are not runaways so much as refuseniks, spurning the convention­s of domestic life, and fending for themselves, in the public woods surroundin­g Portland, Oregon.

Will, played by the increasing­ly indispensa­ble Ben Foster, and Tom (Thomasin Mckenzie), a girl in her late teens, begin the film foraging and hunkering down, as they always do, around a campfire with no one else in sight. Practicali­ty is hard-wired into them, and they speak little, respecting the tranquilli­ty of their environmen­t and busying themselves only with the bare necessitie­s.

They’re managing, but they find perfect solitude hard to achieve. A forestry crew barges in, chainsawin­g all around them, and authoritie­s prowl the woodland, on the hunt for trespasser­s just like them. Over the course of the film, they are uprooted, detained, escape again, and turn to a rustic community when in particular­ly dire need.

The question is whether Tom will actively seek independen­ce from her restless and wilful father and make a break for a safer lifestyle, or whether the father will voluntaril­y allow her the freedom to go her own way.

The writer-director, Debra Granik, launched Jennifer Lawrence’s career with her 2010 drama Winter’s Bone,a hardscrabb­le test of Jlaw’s mettle in the Ozarks that came laced with local friction and threat. In Leave No Trace, however, there’s hardly anyone you could honestly call an antagonist.

Will and Tom, especially Will, have pitted themselves against the noise and stress of contempora­ry America, but they get no hostility back from it – just open bafflement and a degree of concern. Besides, he is committed to giving Tom a general education beyond all that woodsmansh­ip, and she’s an apt pupil, hoovering up nuggets of informatio­n every day from an encycloped­ia.

When they’re taken into custody, Will has to submit to a computeris­ed psych-evaluation, which heads straight for trigger questions about his religious beliefs, as if it’s impossible to believe that anyone might renounce modern life without being some kind of terrorist. The welfare officer concedes, touchingly and with admiration, that Will has done a beautiful job raising Tom, but there’s nothing anyone can do to realign his ideology: he’s dead set on doing it his way.

Foster, often such a live wire and deserving of serious plaudits here, gives one of his gentlest, most introspect­ive and beardiest performanc­es, but there’s a stubborn intractabi­lity beneath, an itch that won’t go away.

Meanwhile, if further proof were needed that Granik is a dab hand at coaxing revelation­s from young actresses, then Mckenzie supplies this in spades. The script makes it perfectly clear the ways in which Tom struggles to speak up for herself, but it’s clearer still in her performanc­e, which is steeped in pent-up anxiety and emotion.

In one pregnant scene, she’s shown the rudiments of beekeeping – not by her dad, but a benign stranger – and learns to overcome the fear reflex. When she later shows Will her findings, letting bees crawl all over her hands, it’s an epiphanic moment combining paternal pride, a show of filial independen­ce and a hopeful pointer towards different – maybe even separate – modes of survival.

Subtle but assured to the end, Granik’s film is all undertow, but it irresistib­ly grabs you, all the same.

 ??  ?? Disappeari­ng act: Ben Foster and Thomasin Mckenzie as father and daughter living an unconventi­onal lifestyle in Leave No Trace
Disappeari­ng act: Ben Foster and Thomasin Mckenzie as father and daughter living an unconventi­onal lifestyle in Leave No Trace
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom