Review by Eric Hillis (@hilliseric)
Directed by: Alejandro G Inarritu
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hardy, Will Poulter, Domhnall Gleeson
Much has been made of DiCaprio's performance here, and he'll probably receive an Oscar for eating raw fish, as that's how awards seem to work these days, but the far more impressive turns come from Tom Hardy as the gruff narcissist who leaves him behind, and Will Poulter as the well-meaning young trapper manipulated by Hardy into going along with his plan.
For his 1948 thriller Rope, Alfred Hitchcock set himself the challenge of filming the movie in what appears to be a series of extended takes. He pulled it off, and the movie is a technical standout. So pleased with his work was Hitch that he decided long takes were the way forward. For his following movie, Under Capricorn, he again used several extended, complex tracking shots, but he admitted almost immediately that he had allowed his ego to get in the way of the storytelling process. There's a time and a place for this technique, and while it worked for Rope, it was detrimental to Under Capricorn. If last year's Oscar winning Birdman was Alejandro Inarritu's Rope, The Revenant is his Under Capricorn. While the unbroken shots served the story of Birdman (it's almost impossible after viewing to imagine that movie filmed any other way), here they disrupt and distract from the narrative.
There are two reasons Inarritu uses long takes here. The first is to show off the extent of Leonardo DiCaprio's performance as fur trapper Hugh Glass, who spends the movie on a vengeful quest after being left for dead following a bear mauling. DiCaprio ate live fish and bits of shrubbery, and both he and his director want us to know it! By showing DiCaprio pluck a swimming fish out of a stream and chow down on it in one take, we know that's a real, live fish he's biting into. But do we really? After all, in the earlier Arikara attack sequence we see arrows fired through men's necks in one unbroken take, and we know that's certainly not real. But much of the publicity has centred around the lengths DiCaprio went to for the sake of realism. The Revenant's director and star are obsessed with selling the film's verisimilitude, but who goes to a movie to watch an actor punish themselves like a Tokyo businessman on a Japanese game show? Besides, there's not much point in showing your lead actor literally chew on scenery if in the same shot you then pan across to a herd of unconvincing CG bison. Much has been made of the film's bear attack; sure, it's a great technical achievement, but then so are the Transformers movies.