Toiling with the cost of revenge

Aljendro G Inarritu and Leonardo DiCaprio speak about challenges of shooting ‘The Reverent’


Reuters December 23, 2015
Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (C) poses with cast members Leonardo DiCaprio (R) and Forrest Goodluck (L) at the premiere of ‘The Revenant’ in Hollywood. PHOTO: REUTERS

LOS ANGELES: Getting mauled by a grizzly bear usually spells a painful death, but for one man, it is the catalyst for a quest fueled by revenge, in a sweeping saga that uncovers man’s willpower to survive against all odds.

The Revenant, out in limited US theaters on Christmas Day, follows the story of Pioneer-era fur trapper Hugh Glass, who was mauled by a grizzly bear and left for dead by his companions. Glass excruciatingly travels across vast, primitive landscapes in pursuit of retribution against the men who abandoned him, with scenes that do not shy away from the gruesome reality of his circumstances.

“It’s a very primal, almost Biblical story of a man surviving in nature, the will to live, the perseverance of the human spirit, what we draw upon to survive against all odds,” actor Leonardo DiCaprio, who plays Glass, said. Mexican filmmaker Alejandro G Inarritu, who won the best picture Oscar this year for his intricately choreographed showbiz satire Birdman, said he wanted to explore the cost of revenge in The Revenant.

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“Revenge is hollow. If even succeeding in revenge brings you back what you lost or what you’re looking for and if that’s the meaning of life, if you accomplish it, then what is the meaning of life?” he said.

The film is likely to garner DiCaprio his fifth best actor Oscar nomination. It is a stark difference from his last Oscar-nominated role as the fast-talking Jordan Belfort in 2013’s The Wolf of Wall Street, as Glass is rendered voiceless for much of the film after his attack.

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“(DiCaprio) doesn’t need words to be great, he’s just very great,” said co-star Domhnall Gleeson.The making of The Revenant is fast becoming a story in itself, from Inarritu’s quest to shoot only in natural light in real snow-covered landscapes to DiCaprio telling media he had slept in animal carcasses during filming.

“That was at first a little bit of a struggle for some of us, but then it just became a matter of trust in Alejandro’s vision,” he said of the arduous shoot. “Once we had that, we started making some pretty powerful sequences in this movie.”

 

Published in The Express Tribune, December 24th, 2015.

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