With all the talk about how movies aren’t faring well at the
box office it seems a shame that so little is spent on great movies while tons
of advertising dollars go into big budget blockbusters that bust no blocks.
Sadly those small movies get a marginal release with little to no promotional
budget. They might make back the miniscule budget they began with but they
don’t take in big bucks. What makes this worse is that there are times, as with
WIND RIVER, when the movie itself it much better than the teen oriented mega
flick. It’s hard to believe it was just 2-3 months ago this film was in
theaters.
Jeremy Renner stars as Cory Lambert, a Fish and Wildlife
agent whose main job is to track down predators that are affecting the people
in the area he works in. That area is in Wyoming, the Wind River Reservation in
particular. The film opens with his tracking and killing a wolf targeting
flocks of sheep. When he goes to collect the wolf he finds another set of
tracks which lead him to the body of an Indian girl named Natalie (Kelsey
Asbille). He calls in the tribal police and then moves on.
Cory picks his son up from his ex-wife. Nothing in
particular is mentioned but there is a tension between them that ties into
their past. It’s his weekend and she’s off to apply for a new job elsewhere.
Called in to help investigate the body he leaves his son on the reservation
with his ex’s parents.
The FBI has been called in since the murder occurred on
federal land and they send in Jane Banner (Elizabeth Olson). Fairly new and
arriving from a gathering in Las Vegas she isn’t prepared for the harshly cold
weather of the area. Borrowing clothes they head to the body. She calls for a
rape kit and Cory explains to her the painful way Natalie died. Twenty degree
below weather, running full bore with no shoes or gloves her lungs would have
crystalized causing her to choke on her own blood.
The official autopsy can’t actually call this a homicide as
to the reason she died and all might end with no help here, something those on
the reservation are used to. The discovery of a second body, that of a man,
changes things around and Banner is allowed to stay and continue her
investigation. With little to go on Banner continues to sift for clues while
Cory tells her she’s missing the big picture.
As someone who tracks predators he tells her to not look for
clues but to follow the paths that are left behind. Using this method is what
led them to the second body. Now as they investigate deeper they confront a
sense of apathy from those on the reservation, a place that offers little hope.
And as the pair get to know one another, Cory reveals the secret he’s kept to
himself to Banner.
The evidence begins to mount and the clues keep coming. They
may be minor but they’re enough to warrant talking to others who might be
involved. With each piece they pick up in their search for the killer or
killers their lives are placed in danger as well. By the end not everyone will
walk away and no one will be left unscarred in one way or another.
What makes this movie work above all else is the performance
given by Renner in the lead role here. I’ve watched him act in a number of
films but this performance seems so different from any I’ve seen him play. His
character is believable and pained, but not to the point that it prevents him
from accomplishing what he sets out to do. Instead he grabs on to that pain and
it gets him through as well as allowing him to retain memories that some might
lose.
Olson does a fine job as well but her character is secondary
to that of Renner. You’re never quite sure if Jane is too wet behind the ears
to understand the best way to handle things of if she’s simply a fish out of
water in this element, a wintery snow scape far removed from her Fort Lauderdale
home base. And yet in some moments she seems to know completely what she is
doing. Also great is Graham Greene as Ben, the Reservation law officer who
gripes about the government never sending help while being grateful for the
help he does receive.
The heart of this film reads like an old mystery in that the
mystery actually IS the centerpiece. Sure there are some character questions
that surround it but the mystery itself is what matters. We’re offered clues to
solve what happened and some may guess before the film ends. The entertainment
lies in trying to figure out what’s going on and who did it. In the end it
makes for a movie that offers brutal reality and a story that holds your
interest from start to finish.
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