The Revenant

For aficionados of brutal genre films, Alejandro González Iñárritu’s The Revenant has enough to keep you satisfied. Find scenes of bravura violence photographed by an eminent cinematographer (the great Emmanuel Lubezki). Find the vague impression of deep, abiding meaning. Find bear-mauling, equine disembowelment. Find rape, castration, graphic suffering. Find additional suffering. Find more suffering. And all of this Iñárritu presents without flinching.
What the film lacks, though, is resonance or empathy. If Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight glories in his characters’ wanton and widespread amorality, Iñárritu skirts it with hints of respectability—though The Revenant isn’t actually a respectable film. It’s a tale of primal comeuppance wrapped in prestige’s clothing. It’s about fur trapper Hugh Glass’s legendary 1823 journey of frontier martyrdom, but it also isn’t. There is a character named Hugh Glass here, portrayed with unhinged commitment by Leonardo DiCaprio, and the film does depict his long crawl to civilization after being left for dead in the wilderness. But there isn’t a thought driving Glass’s struggle for survival save for a thirst for retribution and an impulse to relish in manhood under duress. It is depiction without consideration. The film never gives us a greater reason to care about Glass’s travails than the murder of his son, Hawk (Forrest Goodluck), at the hands of a fellow trapper, Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy, jack of all accents).
The three begin as tenuous comrades, fleeing from a group of Arikara Indians, who ride to rescue their chief’s kidnapped daughter. Fitzgerald has an immediate beef with Glass and with Hawk, who happens to be half Pawnee. This is the narrative’s core through line, which pays off when Glass, clinging to life after having a frank exchange of ideas with a mama grizzly, is abandoned in the snow-blanketed woods by Fitzgerald, who stabs Hawk to death on his way out of Dodge.
And that’s it. The movie doesn’t need much more than that, but more is what you get with Iñárritu. The Revenant is about as indulgent and unrestrained as a movie made by someone other than Peter Jackson or Zack Snyder can be, Iñárritu ignoring all ideas of careful filmmaking and doing his own thing. Which is fine to an extent—Iñárritu’s “own thing” is thrilling when taken in capsules. Glass wrestling the bear is gratifyingly intense, a protracted sequence where the camera’s swaying and swinging gives us the sense of being as helpless and prone as Glass himself. It’s immersive technical filmmaking, but the problem is that too much of the film is both sensory and unrelentingly savage. Less really is more.