‘The Revenant’ a trial for both actor and audience

Early screenings of the film have seen audiences walking out during extremely violent scenes

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TNS
TNS
TNS

Early press coverage of The Revenant has focused on the grueling experience director Alejandro G. Inarritu and star Leonardo DiCaprio had shooting their frontier epic.

After the film screened to an attentive audience of media and awards voters recently at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, it seems clear that moviegoers will also need some grit to make it through the brutal 2-hour, 36-minute tale of real-life frontiersman Hugh Glass (DiCaprio), which Fox will open at Christmas.

An explorer guiding fur trappers in what is now South Dakota, Glass was mauled by a grizzly bear in 1823 and left for dead by members of his party. The Revenant, from a screenplay by Mark L. Smith and Inarritu, depicts Glass’ expedition with merciless realism, showing him grappling with the bear, scavenging meat off carcasses and cauterizing his own festering wounds by burning them shut.

Members of the crowd at a recent screening, which nearly filled the academy’s 1,200-seat theater, gasped, yelped and often covered their eyes during the film, while others walked out during The Revenant’s many violent sequences.

At a post-screening Q&A, DiCaprio said The Revenant was “the most difficult film, I think, that any of us have ever done.”

Glass spends much of the movie alone and rendered nearly speechless by injury, leaving DiCaprio to communicate his character’s anguish and agony wordlessly, with pleading eyes and a staggering body. When he speaks, it is often in a Native American language, either to his son or to a helpful Pawnee Indian whom he meets on the trail.

While all eyes are on DiCaprio as an Oscar contender, supporting performances by Tom Hardy as a fearsome trapper with much of the movie’s dialogue and Domhnall Gleeson as the good-hearted leader of the expedition are equally memorable. Native American actors in smaller roles deliver some of the movie’s most stirring moments, including Forrest Goodluck as Glass’ son, Hawk.

Shot in Canada and Argentina by Emmanuel Lubezki, who has won the Oscar for cinematography the last two years in a row for Birdman and Gravity, The Revenant juxtaposes barbarous action sequences pitting man against nature and man against man with sweeping vistas of snow-covered mountains and icy rivers.

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