Directed by: Benh Zeitlin.
Written by: Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin.
Starring: Quvenzhané Wallis (Hushpuppy), Dwight Henry (Wink), Levy Easterly (Jean Battiste), Lowell Landes (Walrus), Pamela Harper (Little Jo), Gina Montana (Miss Bathsheeba), Amber Henry (LZA), Jonshel Alexander (Joy Strong).
Beasts of the Southern Wild
has already become one of the most talked about films of the year since its
debut at the Sundance Film Festival. It’s one of those rare Sundance films that
proves the festival, which usually trades in the same old dysfunctional family
comedy-dramas, can still produce some great films. Co-written and directed by
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild is the type of film that sneaks up on
you – gradually building its emotional impact until its devastating climax. It
is a film about childhood, told from the point of view of a child and not seen
through the lens of an adult looking backwards. As a film about what it’s like
to be a child, Beasts of the Southern Wild is great.
A lot of the credit for the
success of the film belongs to the wonderful Quvenzhane Wallis, who was five
when the film was made, and delivers one of the best performances by a child
actor ever – and one of the best performances of the year by anyone. She stars
as Hushpuppy, a child living with her father in what they call the Bathtub – a
place off the shore of New Orleans, cut off from the mainland by levees, and
forgotten by pretty much everyone. The residents of the bathtub are all dirt
poor – to say they live in shacks would be an insult to shacks. Hushpuppy lives
with her father Wink (Dwight Henry), who is trying to raise Hushpuppy as well
as he can, but it must be said he’s not a very good father. He loves Hushpuppy,
but he’s also a drunk, may have some sort of mental illness, and has a tendency
to disappear for days at a time – during these periods, Hushpuppy has to take
care of herself. When Wink is around, he is prone to fits of anger and
violence. And yet Hushpuppy loves him – and he loves her. They are all each
other have. Wink has told Hushpuppy that when her mother first saw her, she was
so beautiful that she couldn’t take it – and so she just “swam away”. Hushpuppy
still thinks that one day she’ll just swim back.
One day a storm hits – it
may be Katrina, it may not be – and leaves the entire Bathtub under water. The
surviving residents pile into ramshackle “boats”, made up of old cars and other
makeshift items. They try to hatch a plan to save the Bathtub – but soon the
government, seemingly for the first time caring about these people, come and
force them to leave, putting them in shelters they don’t want to be in.
The entire movie is told
from the point of view of Hushpuppy. She often narrates the film in a hushed
voice – leading some to compare the films to the work of Terrence Malick who
also likes this type of voiceover. It’s clear from the beginning of the movie
that what we are being told is not the objective truth – but the truth as seen
by Hushpuppy – through her innocent eyes. She doesn’t see anything wrong with
living in the Bathtub – to her it’s the most beautiful place in the world.
After all, it’s all she has ever known, so why would she feel it’s at all
strange? To her, it is the Bathtub that is normal, and the Shelter she is
shipped off to that feels strange and alien to her. And Quvenzhané Wallis never
hits a false note during the course of the film – she in fact carries the film.
She has been described in several reviews as a “force of nature”, and that’s as
good as a description as I can up with. She is natural in her every scene.
Dwight Henry is equally good as her father – which is all the more amazing when
you find out that he is a baker in real life, and has no real desire to act.
Zeitlin is said to have taken an approach similar to Mike Leigh when making
this film – working with the actor themselves to develop their characters. And
the result is a movie full of interesting people, who feel fully lived in.
The film is also a great
technical achievement. The cinematography has a strange beauty about it – even
when much of it is handheld, which I often find distracting, but here quite
simply works. The score is memorable, and although it perhaps is a little too
heavy handed at times, for the most part it works beautifully. For a movie shot
on such a small budget, the special effects are also quite good –
Hushpuppy imagines a group of mythical
“aurocks” stalking them on their journey. Bu t the biggest technical
achievement is the art direction – from the ramshackle sheds, to the weird
boats, the film is full of memorable, one of a kind creations.
Beasts of the Southern Wild
is one of those films that seemingly comes from nowhere. It is by a first time
filmmaker who has the confidence and skill of a veteran, stars a group of
unknown, non-professional actors. And it is also one of the best films of the
year so far.
aurochs?
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