- Actors: Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Jon Bernthal, Martin Sensmeier, Julia Jones
- Director: Taylor Sheridan
- Disc Format: AC-3, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Language: English
- Subtitles: Spanish
- Region: Region A/1
- Rated: R
- Studio: LIONSGATE
- Release Date: November 14, 2017
- Run Time: 107 minutes
After his
success as screenwriter with hits the last two years in a row (Sicario, Hell or High Water), Taylor Sheridan has once again blended a crime
narrative with the modern western genre, this time as the director. Sicario dealt with drug trafficking, Hell or High Water was about small town
bank robberies, and Wind River about
a murder investigation on a remote Native American reservation. The terrain may
have switched from the hot deserts of southern states to the freezing mountains
of Wyoming,
but it is the plot’s connection with the setting that aligns it with the
classic westerns of the past. At the same time, there is a painful intimacy to
the tragedy in Wind
River which was missing from his previous films, making this a
somber affair despite an action-packed climactic resolution.
Although the
plot of the film centers on the investigation of a mysterious and suspicious
death, the broader themes of the film deal with loss. Cory Lambert (Jeremy
Renner) is a hunter for the Fish and Wildlife Department near an Indian
reservation, still recovering from the loss of his daughter. When hunting a
predator in the area, Lambert comes across the frozen corpse of a young woman,
bringing back the memories of his loss. FBI Agent Jane Banner (Elizabeth Olsen)
is sent to investigate the death, though she quickly discovers the unique
details of the community are easier to navigate with the help of Lambert. This
is convenient, especially since he has made a promise to the parents of the victim
that he will hunt the killer just as he would a dangerous animal.
With his
previous screenplays, Sheridan tackled larger social issues such as the big
business of drug trafficking and the desperation brought on by the threat of
foreclosure, but Wind River has
themes that seem focused on the micro up until the last moments. Though it is
ultimately just a film about one tragic true event, it shines a light on a
larger issue facing Native American women that often goes unmentioned, on film
or otherwise. And beyond the social context, it is primarily just a film that
deals with the tragedy of loss head on. There may be some brutal action in Wind River, but
it is the drama of grief that leaves a lasting impression.
Wind River is easily the most generic of
Sheridan’s
American frontier trilogy, containing a fairly straightforward mystery whose
morality is nowhere near as complicated as his past films. It is far easier to
distinguish the good guys from the bad ones in this film, and justice is also
easier to dispatch as a result. But this also makes the actions against the
decent characters that much more unwarranted, making the violence in Wind River even
more heartbreakingly pointless. It is a stronger film, even if it is less
enjoyable as a result.
The Blu-ray
release of Wind
River comes with a Digital HD copy, along with a couple extras
on the disc. There are a handful of deleted scenes and a behind-the-scenes
video gallery, which may feel a bit sparse considering the early critical
praise the film received.
Entertainment Value:
7.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 9/10
Historical
Significance: 7/10
Special Features: 4/10
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