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Everything you need to know about Ree, her family, and the various players who will fade in and out of the story come from this search, and it's a beautiful piece of storytelling from writer/director Debra Granik and her writing partner and producer Anne Rosellini. Set in the Ozark region of Missouri, WINTER'S BONE takes a very simple premise (daughter searches for lost father) and imbues it with a haunting, otherworldly atmosphere by grounding everything in a reality that few mainstream moviegoers are familiar with. The poverty and familial culture represented in the film feels almost classical at times - Jessup Dolly, the missing father; the mysterious Thump Milton, who runs the crooked kingdom of drugs that the town turns a blind eye to; and of course the vengeful, outcast Teardrop, Jessup's brother and Ree's eventual partner in the search for Jessup, who may not even be alive.
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It feels like Jennifer Lawrence sprung out of nowhere to give life to Ree Dolly, a young girl forced to grow up much faster than anyone should have to, raising her siblings and caring for her mother all while to trying to keep food on the table and the influences around her from infecting herself and her family. Her voice is worn with experience, tired and tough, with no room for negotiation or excuses. In a film where every face is lined with a million stories, it's impossible to turn away from hers, and Lawrence manages to be carry the plot of WINTER'S BONE without having to rely on anything other than her determinedness, her drive to find her father and save her family.
Filmed with a striking grace, with a tight screenplay anchored by two excellent Oscar-nominated performances, WINTER'S BONE may have been the big surprise at the awards ceremony this year (it scraped up four nominations including Best Picture), but to anyone who saw the film it should have come as no surprise at all. Great movie, and definitely one of the best of 2010.
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The slow pace, and complicated mystery story line here made this film a little unsettlinga at points, but the dark setting and good performances from the cast made this an alright character-study. Good Review!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dan O., and agreed on the unsettling nature of the film. The pace is very methodical, and I think adds a lot to the way the story grabbed me, especially since I watched this at about 2:00 in the morning. I don't know I would classify it as a character study (since there's almost nothing there besides what's needed to move the story along), but as an off-kilter Ozarks noir I'll take it.
ReplyDeleteGreat review, Chris. It is as you say, an economical character study with some truly great performances. It's a pity it didn't get the notice, or audience, it deserved. Everyone I know who has come across it has said the same as you:
ReplyDelete"Great movie, and definitely one of the best of 2010."
Thanks, and great to see you back.
Thanks...good to be back! I just got burned out for a long while, trying to decide what to do with all my different blogs (like you, I tried Wordpress, and still use Squarespace for my personal blog).
ReplyDeleteGlad you thought of the film as highly as I do, and i'm looking forward to checking out the new Wordpress site, although I'll also keep ...Boomer marked in case you throw more stuff up there!
Great review. Wonderful film
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