Reviews, Awards and Festival Coverage, Trailers, and miscellany from an industry outsider
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
A review of "The Road" from the Venice Film Festival...and it's good!!
Hopefully this isn't the only one of its kind. I've been waiting for this one for quite some time (it was supposed to come out last year). There were rumors of disastrous test screenings, although many have claimed that the film completed shooting too close to the release date and needed time for a non-rushed post production period. Obviously the fact that it was pushed back a year but still received an (early) awards season release means that the studio must have some amount of faith in the finished product, or at least Viggo Mortensen's performance, which could be a big contender in this year's Beset Actor race. Whether or not John Hillcoat can top the Coen brothers in terms of adapting and executing Cormac McCarthy's vision remains to be seen, but it's nice to finally have some reassurance that the film might actually be worth the wait.
Source: The Independent (UK)
First Night: The Road, Venice Film Festival
(Rated 4/ 5 )
Bleak but moving tale of the apocalypse
By Geoffrey MacNab
Thursday, 3 September 2009
The Road, the very long-gestating adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel, was originally due to be released almost a year ago. Its long delay led many to speculate that the film was in trouble. It was very hard to see how a novel as stark and pared-down as McCarthy's fable about a father and son roaming a post-apocalyptic landscape could be made the stuff of cinematic drama.
In the event, John Hillcoat has made a film of power and sensitivity that works remarkably well on the big screen. It plays like a Dystopian version of Huck Finn. "Tattered gods slouching in their rags across the waste," was how McCarthy described the father and son on their grim odyssey south across America toward the coast.
The film captures well the strange mix of heroism and seeming futility that characterises the journey. What is most impressive is the restraint the filmmakers bring to their material. The look of the film is muted and grey other than in the flashbacks to the pre-apocalyptic moments that the man (Viggo Mortensen) enjoyed with his wife (Charlize Theron) before the world ground to a halt.
The music by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis is likewise understated. We don't hear Cave wailing out murder ballads. Instead, the score is used in ominous but understated fashion to accentuate the feeling of loss and foreboding that runs throughout the film.
The Road must have been a plum job for the production designers. They clearly relished helping create the barren landscapes, eerily empty cities and dust-covered houses that fill the film. In other hands, The Road might have played like a slightly artier version of the many post-apocalyptic zombie or horror movies that have been made in recent years. There are plenty of macabre elements here – skulls on sticks, blood-drenched ground, cannibalism, naked humans kept locked away in basements by grim-looking backwoodsmen.
However, Hillcoat eschews morbidity for its own sake. His focus is more on the relationship between the man and the boy. The father comes closer and closer to losing his moral compass and becoming like "the bad guys" It's his son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) who both gives him the reason for persevering with the journey and pulls him back from his own will to violence.
At points, the film is so earnest that it risks becoming inadvertently comic. Hairy, mud-encrusted men wandering across bleak landscapes eating precious tins of fruit can't help take on an absurd aspect. However, the craftsmanship here generally keeps the risk of self-parody at bay.
There is a moving cameo from (an unrecognisable) Robert Duvall as a dying old man the two travellers briefly take pity on and a slightly eccentric late appearance from Guy Pearce as another survivor.
The Road is short on dialogue and very bleak in subject matter but nonetheless makes absorbing and affecting viewing.
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