Mud:
****/*****, or 8/10
Gritty
and stern coming-of-age drama set on the banks of the mighty
Mississippi in a poor, rural community where you get nothing for
free, love least of all. Young boys Ellis and Neckbone (marvelous
acting from newcomers Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland) try to make the
best of a harsh life, having fun as well as their situation will
allow them. Their latest find to ensure a good time: an abandoned
boat swept into the treetops by a flood on a small, neglected river
island. Soon someone else encroaches on this idyllic place of theirs
though, a mysterious drifter named Mud (impeccable performance by
Matthew McConaughey, almost making you forget the numerous lousy
romcoms he has starred in in recent years by showing he can still do
more demanding bits of acting). On the run from the police, Mud
weaves a sympathetic tale of drama and romance which ensnares the
boys into making a deal with this stranger: if they provide him with
food, tools and information in his ploy to elope with his sweetheart
Juniper (a battered but ever beautiful Reese Witherspoon), they can
keep the boat, and, thrown in as a bonus, his gun. The boys swiftly
find out Mud may be more dangerous than they at first anticipated, as
his archenemy arrives in town wist a posse of bounty hunters, poised
to kill their new secret associate at all costs. The audience has no
illusions that Mud's stories about his life and situation are nowhere
near the whole truth, if not a bunch of bald faced lies and baloney.
But like the young protagonists, we cannot help but be entranced by
Mud's Southern charm and seeming sincerity, especially when much of
his wild tales seem to be verified as the film progresses. For Ellis,
the love between Mud and Juniper is a refreshing taste of the good
things in life he himself sorely lacks, as his own parents cannot get
along and are moving increasingly towards a divorce which may end
Ellis' life as he knows it, and not necessarily for the better. Just
hitting puberty and taking his own first steps in the minefield that
is love, Ellis so badly wants to believe in true love that will make
people do anything to maintain it, he is blind to any hints that
suggest Mud is nothing but a con man. Of course, things are indeed
not as they seem, and everything points to Mud having used the boys
for his own shady purposes. Despite the eventual exposure of his web
of lies though, Mud gets his fair chance to redeem himself in the
eyes of his former acolytes, as his nemesis and his band of brigands
are moving in on him with no moral qualms of taking out anyone that
has come to his aid of late, putting Ellis and Neckbone in grave
danger too. A violent conclusion and an unavoidable number of deaths
seems inescapable, and love seems unlikely to save the day as Ellis
so firmly desired. Director Jeff Nichols (Take Shelter)
doesn't go easy on his juvenile main characters and adds plenty of
misery and bad luck to their already hard life, shattering their
illusions and dreams for the future, but never going so far as to
eliminate hope entirely. A child's notions of love and life never
quite come to fruition as it had expected, he states, but good things
can still come from a bad situation in the long run (which does lead
to a happy ending that cannot fully avoid a bit of sentimentality).
His point is made with help of a great supporting cast of excellent
actors, among them the likes of Sam Shepard, Paul Sparks and Michael
Shannon (the latter both Boardwalk Empire veterans). Despite
the hardships their characters suffer, the swamp lands surrounding
the Mississippi that Nichols introduces us to remain a place of
simple beauty and hopeful dreams that no violence, betrayal or lies
can hurt. And those who hope for shirtless scenes of McConaughey, as
is his routine he pulls one off (literally) in this film as well.
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