Dark, Moody and Remarkable

    In this mesmerizing movie—the best dramatic film of the year so far—Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence) 17, is taking care of her withdrawn, nearly mute mother and two younger siblings in the backwoods of the Missouri Ozarks. Her father Jessup was arrested for cooking methamphetamine and has disappeared after putting his house and land up as bond.  If he doesn’t show, Ree and her family will lose everything.

   Ree sets out across the bleak winter landscape to visit the large, paranoid, secretive Dolly clan in search of her father. This is a world most Americans know little about: Poor, inbred, tribal, the Dollys live by a code generations old in which women serve and protect their men, even when the men are criminal and corrupt.  

   Director Debra Granik and cinematographer Michael McDonough show rather than tell. This is a film of few words, with moody strings and occasional traditional mountain music.  There is an almost Sicilian sense of omerta:  Why talk when looks, shrugs or sudden violence say it best?

   Tough, quasi-documentary in its realism, the movie is nearly unbearable in its first half hour.

     Lawrence, who is only 20, gives a remarkable performance.  Sometimes seeming teenaged, more often early middle-aged, she is an actress in complete control of her character.  John Hawkes, from TV’s “Lost,â€� is moving as her unstable, meth-addicted uncle, Teardrop.  The rest of the cast is just right, even the hags.

“Winter’s Boneâ€� is a small classic, a serious American movie. So few  are made.  

     “Winter’s Boneâ€� is showing at the Triplex in Great Barrington, MA.

   The Moviehouse in Millerton, NY, may screen it soon. It is rated R for drug material, language and violent content.

     

     

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