Orlando Sentinel

The new movie “Alpha”

- By Katie Walsh

is an epic adventure tale that tells how humans and dogs came to have the relationsh­ip they do.

You know Sheila the She-Wolf from “Glow” on Netflix? “Alpha” would be her favorite movie. She’d watch it every day on a VHS tape, memorizing each line of Cro-Magnon dialogue, fashioning her costumes in tribute to the fur-trimmed Hot Topic looks sported by the characters, adopting a Czech wolf dog like the one in the movie. It’s sweet, really, to imagine the kind of devotion “Alpha” might inspire, a film that’s very simple, kind of strange, but will melt any dog lover’s heart. It’s the story of a young boy living in Europe’s last Ice Age, his fight for survival and the special relationsh­ip with a wolf that keeps him alive. It’s something Sheila the She-Wolf would really dig, and maybe you will too.

When it comes to sheer spectacle, “Alpha” is a stunning production, especially in 3D Imax. Director Albert Hughes and cinematogr­apher Martin Gschlacht recreate the untouched vistas of pre-civilizati­on Europe shooting on location in Canada, while enhancing with visual effects. The camera soars and swoops across the prairies, fields and glaciers, creating the sense of flying. When the landscape becomes impacted with snow, it is epic, but less visually stimulatin­g.

Kodi Smit-McPhee stars as Keda, the son of a tribal chief Tau (Johannes Haukur Johannesso­n), embarking on his first big hunt. Tau is filled with pride to have his son learning how they provide for their tribe, teaching him lessons along the way about selfsacrif­ice and leadership. The dialogue here, what little of it there is, is frankly a bunch of baloney — the kind of vague aphorisms about killing things as a sign of strength and worthiness that’s essentiall­y toxic masculinit­y and bootstrap individual­ism dressed up as naturalist­ic wisdom.

Fortunatel­y, the sensitive and shy Keda is cut from a different hide, and he’s the film’s true hero. During the hunt, everything goes haywire, and Keda is thrown off a cliff by an angry bison. The tribe must leave him behind, unable to lose their chief Tau to a risky rescue mission. He’s racked with grief, but he must do what’s best for the tribe and leaves his presumedde­ad son behind.

Here sets off Keda’s remarkable survival mission. All he takes from his father is his map home, a tattoo on his hand of the Big Dipper constellat­ion. He’s no great hunter, but he’s a sweet and gentle soul: a healer, not a killer. When a pack of wolves goes after him, he injures the alpha wolf, then nurses it back to health. Soon Alpha is by his side, through blizzards and predator attacks, as Keda makes the arduous journey home.

“Alpha” is an epic adventure tale that tells the story of how humans and dogs came to have the relationsh­ip they do, one of devoted companions­hip and mutual support. Thematical­ly, “Alpha” nails the idea that our survival is dependent on the love and support of others, and the idea emerges from the haze of faux fur and war paint in which “Alpha” is coated.

 ?? COLUMBIA PICTURES ??
COLUMBIA PICTURES
 ?? ALAN MARKFIELD/COLUMBIA PICTURES ?? Kodi Smit-McPhee stars in “Alpha,” the story of a young Cro-Magnon boy left for dead.
ALAN MARKFIELD/COLUMBIA PICTURES Kodi Smit-McPhee stars in “Alpha,” the story of a young Cro-Magnon boy left for dead.

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