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May 25, 2013
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‘Meek’s Cutoff’: 104 Minutes You Can’t Get BackPosted on Apr 17, 2011
It’s the traditional function of western movies—especially those of the beleaguered wagon train subgenre—to turn what is essentially a painful schlep into epic adventure. This means you’re obliged to say for “Meek’s Cutoff” that it returns this form to most basic elements—three families in three Conestogas, a blustering, blundering and vaguely sadistic trail boss (Bruce Greenwood as the title character) who has no idea where he’s going, and a lone Indian who some in the party think a menace, others a savior, but is rather obviously not the harbinger of a howling mob of savages bent on rapacious mischief. Essentially, he’s what this stupefying movie has in the way of mystery and menace. Mostly what this underfinanced enterprise requires—aside from a reliable set of turn signals and some Dr. Scholl’s orthotics—is water—as its tiny cast (including such worthies as Michelle Williams, Zoe Kazan and Will Patton) attempts to traverse Oregon’s Cascade Mountains on their way to somewhere or other. A suspenseful script—this one is by Jonathan Raymond—would have helped, too. As it is, we are left to muse on just how slowly teams of oxen drag their way across the barren waste. But yet there are times in director Kelly Reichardt’s very bad movie—she’s something of a specialist in low-energy inconsequence—when we become, despite our better judgment, fascinated by its utter lack of spectacle, by the way it insists on testing our patience. Despite the film’s plethora of poke bonnets and muzzleloaders, this marks it as a modernist work, implicitly stating that boredom, far from being a vice, is a virtue. Works of this kind, by their very torpor, implicitly criticize livelier films (and other fictions as well), making them seem lowlife, cheesy and sold-out to—OMG—“entertainment.” Life, as we know, is not a bowl of cherries, and the theory behind movies of this sort is that presumptive art—particularly popular art—should reflect that drear condition. By inducing stupor, something like “Meek’s Cutoff” enhances its connection to reality, and reality, as we all know, is good for us. We may not have had any fun at this movie, or even enjoyed the scenery (generally a minimal pleasure of even the worst westerns), but we emerge from it in a sobered state: It must have been good—all right, make that worthwhile—I’m so glassy-eyed with its existential import that I can’t remember where I parked the car. OK, I could go on heaping insults on this movie forever. But let me make a more serious point. The implicit subject of all movies is time—how it passes on the screen before us, how it passes for us as we sit twitching in the theater. “Energy,” some wise man once said, “is eternal delight.” What he meant by that, I’ve always supposed, is that however serious an art object is supposed to be, its author owes to his audience something singular to take away—verbal dexterity, for instance. Or larger-than-life characters. Or some sweep and spectacle we’ve not seen before. Or, if you’re determined to go the minimalist route, some exploration of the intricately mixed motives people bring to any worthy enterprise. Why? Because they have asked for our time, and we have granted it more or less willingly. But more or less suspiciously as well. We are not there merely to chew our cuds. Or, even if we’re adolescents, to await the flatulence jokes. Bad movies go with the cinemaddict’s territory (remember that quaint neologism?). Sometimes I think they are the territory. But there is a difference between wasting time—a risk we always run at the movies—and having it consciously stolen from us, which is what languid and self-congratulatory movies like “Meek’s Cutoff” smugly do. Advertisement Previous item: The Reinvention of Malcolm X Next item: ‘Restrepo’ Director Killed in Libya New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By edith grove, June 3, 2011 at 10:13 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
How about the time I wasted watching THOR, HANGOVER 2 - shall I go on? Trust
Report thisme the list is long. Schickel has the arguing power of a split pea: time within
movies and the real time one gives to watch them are unrelated. Can someone
buy this guy an education? He obviously wants to be bright and thoughtful, but
frankly, in this film culture, he plays Bruce Greenwood’s part.
By DarthMiffy, April 22, 2011 at 4:22 am Link to this comment
LIving in Tokyo, which can be and IS completely a frenetic experience. Nowadays,
Report thiswith the ever-lengthening triple dramas endlessless unfolding. It’s like crossing a
broad prairie via Conestoga. I’d like to see this movie for some slow time and
sense of relief.
By willrose, April 21, 2011 at 4:13 pm Link to this comment
The ‘wise man’ who coined the phrase “Energy is Eternal Delight”, was William Blake. Blake has also been unfairly accused of wasting people’s time, or being inexplicable.
Report thisBy Louis Proyect, April 21, 2011 at 9:31 am Link to this comment
Seems to me the director’s method was to recreate in the viewer the bleak, existential boredom the settlers themselves faced
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My advice would be to rent something by Antonioni from Netflix and not waste 12 dollars on this crappy movie.
Report thisBy Gil, April 21, 2011 at 9:12 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
We’ve become so immersed and unconsciously overwhelmed in “spectacle” that we
Report thisare unable to recognize the greater meaning and value of the ordinary. This
reaction to this movie proves just that.
By lane08, April 21, 2011 at 12:47 am Link to this comment
Somehow this review is drawing me towards wanting to see this movie.
Seems to me the director’s method was to recreate in the viewer the bleak,
existential boredom the settlers themselves faced—the flatness of dry travel and
the endless feel of not knowing where the hell you are going; the future over the
horizon that keeps being just like the present. Seems like introject cinema. Seems
like she succeeded.
Seems, as the reviewer says, very, deliberately, post modern.
Report thisBy Louis Proyect, April 20, 2011 at 9:32 am Link to this comment
I think that Kelly Reichardt has made some decent movies in the past but this one was a bomb. She missed the chance for having some real drama by not allowing the Indian’s words to be seen as subtitles. She defended this approach by saying that the audience should have had the same perspective as the white settlers. Alas, that is the same perspective you found in John Ford westerns as well.
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