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Sharlto Copley

Beast: Unleash the Beast, Save the Pack

(from left) Norah (Leah Sava Jeffries) and Nathan (Idris Elba) in Beast, directed by Baltasar Korm?kur.

Idris Elba vs. a Lion. 

Do you need more to peak your interest in Beast? By taking one of Hollywood?s best current actors and asking him to engage in a fight to the death with a wild animal, one would hope that the result would be entertaining.

And, even though there’s not much more to the film, thankfully they?d be right.

Directed by Baltasar Kormakur, Beast tells the story of Dr. Nate Daniels (Elba), a recently widowed father who returns to South Africa on a vacation to help him reconnect with his two daughters. Arriving at a game reserve directed by Martin Battles (Sharlto Copley), the family embarks on a journey to see wildlife in its natural habitat. But when they discover a village that has been attacked by a mysterious beast, Daniels and his family begin a battle to survive the attacks of a blood-thirsty lion who is out for vengeance.

While Beast may follow many of the tropes of other survivalist dramas, that doesn?t mean that it isn?t a solid thriller and surprisingly engaging affair. Admittedly, the film?s premise and script are almost as simple as stated earlier? yet Kormakur manages to squeeze every last drop of intensity from the film. After all, while Beast may speak to the damage created by poachers, the real appeal here is the battle against the lion itself.

Idris Elba as Dr. Nate Samuels in Beast, directed by Baltasar Korm?kur.

Tightly executed, Beast draws the viewer in with some marvelous cinematography and camera movement. By his extensive use of long takes, Kormakur makes the camera feel as though it?s stalking Elba as he weaves in and out of danger. At the same time, through its collection of medium and close-up shots, Beast draws the viewer into the middle of the battle. (Without giving any spoilers, the scene under the jeep is particularly well-orchestrated.)  These simple techniques manage to elevate the set pieces in ways that set it apart for more standard examples of the genre. What?s more, clocking in at only 93 minutes (!), the film doesn?t overstay its welcome. By keeping the runtime brief, Kormakur allows the action to tell the story without too many prolonged scenes of exposition or unnecessary dialogue. 

In essence, he wants you to feel the story.

Credit must also be given to Elba as well, who evades the vicious beast with surprising enthusiasm. While he doesn?t have a lot of dialogue-heavy moments, Elba runs, rolls and battles his CGI foe with energy and interest. In fact, he almost feels like he?s enjoying his time in the film. As such, Beast?s commitment to the premise and energy gives life to the project, making it more fun to watch than expected. (If anything, one of the more disappointing performances within the film is Copley who is given very little to do and doesn?t feel as engaged.)

At its heart, Beast wants to explore the importance of protecting your pack. Having lost his wife to cancer, Nate is struggling to keep his family together. By making the trip to South Africa, he is hopeful that reconnect with his heritage?and his kids. However, similar to the rogue lion himself, Elba is a man in search for the next chapter of his life as he grapples with the pain of loss. 

In this battle, the line between man and beast are blurred. But they are, of course, different.

(from left) Nathan (Idris Elba), Martin (Sharlto Copley), Mare (Iyana Halley) and Norah (Leah Sava Jeffries) in Beast, directed by Baltasar Korm?kur.

While the lion seems to be looking for revenge out of his grief, Elba searches for hope. Whereas the beast fights for pride, Elba does to protect. Interestingly here, Beast acknowledges that protection of the pack is not only one person?s job. Mirroring the effectiveness of other prides, each member of Elba?s family are committed to helping each other. In this way, the film avoids the trope of ?one man saving the world? and reminds the viewer that everyone has a role to play in keeping the pack together.

While one cannot say that Beast is the best example of the survival genre, one also can?t deny that it?s not entertaining. With fun camerawork and lively performances, Kormakur and his team have created something that has a surprising amount of bite.

Beast is available in theatres on Friday, August 19, 2022

Ted K.: The Darkness Within

Directed by Tony Stone, Ted K gives the viewer a look inside the life of Ted Kaczynski (Sharlto Copley), aka the infamous Unabomber. Once a genius mathematician, Ted now lives in insolation in the Montana mountains. Far from civilization, Ted grows an increasing contempt for women, technology, and modern society. Within the film, the viewer gets to see his declining mental state, and his life leading to his infamous killing spree. One of the most terrifying terrorist/serial killers to elude American authorities, Kaczynski kills with no remorse.

Beginning in the actual Montana land Ted was living in, the film explores Ted’s life and its affect on his psyche. A poor man with nobody besides his mother in his life, Ted has fallen to a low place. Once a math prodigy praised for his genius who became a young professor, Kaczynski now finds himself eating dirt, hitchhiking to payphones, and asking to borrow money from his mother. Over time, he slowly becomes more out of touch with reality, blaming it on technology. To him, technology is destroying nature and ruining the world. However, to the rest of the world, he sounds insane which sets him on a course to his infamous bombings and mind games with the police.

What makes Ted K unique is that it explores though his human side, beyond the bombings. Usually with films exploring serial killers and terrorists you empathize with them and see that they were just a product of society tearing them down. (After all, maybe if the world weren?t so cruel, they wouldn?t have lashed out against it.)

Well, that?s not the case for Ted.

Instead, Kaczynski is portrayed as an arrogant fool who believes himself to be better than everyone else. He treated women with disrespect. He talked down to his own family, as if he was the second coming of Jesus sent to save them from technology. While the film may show his human side, it also believes that he had no redeeming qualities at all.

In the end, Ted K is an interesting look at what motivates a man to commit the most unthinkable. Here, Kaczynski is detestable in every way, but that’s a testament to some solid work by Copley in the process. As such, Ted K shows what happens when someone succumbs to the darkness within and unleashes it upon the world.

Ted K is available in theatres on Friday, February 18th, 2022.

The Hollars – The Comedy of Crises

?You won?t know until you get there that you?re okay.?

Can a comically dysfunctional family deal with a looming crisis? That is the setup for The Hollars, but there?s more here than bumbling through the situation. It also provides a bit of insight into what it means to be family even in the most difficult times.

hollars2

John Hollar (John Krasinski) is a struggling artist trying to make it in New York City. He?s soon to become a parent along with his girlfriend Rebecca (Anna Kendrick). When John gets a call about his mother?s (Margo Martindale) serious health issue, he must go back to the small Ohio town he?s from and deal with his father (Richard Jenkins) and brother (Sharlto Copley) who are all pretty tied up in their own issues. All of the foibles are exaggerated for comic purposes, sometimes to the detriment of the story.

This film brings together end of life issues and the beginning of life issues. There are always fears around both. Some of those fears are about ourselves (what will become of us) and some are focused on others (who will take care of loved ones). These fears are treated with humor, but also with a good dose of pathos. One of my favorite scenes in the movie is when John volunteers to shave his mother?s head before surgery. For the nurse to have done it would have just been too cold and clinical. But as John does it, we sense an intimacy and love that could help his mother through something that is very difficult.

When birth and death are so near in a film, we should expect that we are being asked to reflect not just on mortality, but on the meaning of all that lies between those two bookends of life. John is standing in both worlds?one that is full of possibility, excitement, and joy, and one that brings grief and sorrow. We mark our lives with such events, but life is really not about either as much as it is about all that fills in between. That is what John is beginning to learn as he worries about his mother?s health and also worries about what it will mean to be a father, responsible for another?s well bring. Life is what we find between birth and death?not just ours, but the many points of transition that fill our years.

Photos courtesy of Sony Picture Classics

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