The Town

Affleck has turned out an accomplished and riveting crime thriller. The Town isn't as hot as Heat, but it's one hell of a scorcher.

The Hole 3D

A proper horror for kids big and small, The Hole is a great relief after The Human Centipede. Friendly fun to freak out the hole (ahem) family.

I'm Still Here

Committed and convincing, I'm Still Here is a brave and unusual piece of cinema. Fascinating.

Winter's Bone

As bleak as Brick, Winter's Bone is a cold modern mystery that should earn Jennifer Lawrence an Oscar. A frostbitten pleasure.

The Other Guys

There are flashes of brilliance in this frantic Ferrell vehicle. The Other Guys never shoots to kill, but it frequently finds your funny bone.

Tamara Drewe

Intelligently titillating, Tamara Drewe hides its smarts under a hedgerow of filth. Unassuming, undeniably fun.

Going the Distance

Drew and Justin make sparks fly in this natural, likeable movie. Unlike most rom-coms this year, Going the Distance is worth making the trip to see.

Cyrus

Mumblecore meets mainstream without making a masterpiece. Painful and heartfelt but rarely funny, Cyrus is good but it's no Greenberg.

The Runaways

A run-of-the-mill rock biopic elevated by its quick script and great cast. Forget mopey Bella: Kristen Stewart rocks.

The Last Exorcism

The Last Exorcism blends belief, doubt and humour to produce some seriously scary cinema. Until the dubious ending.

The Switch

Ill-conceived but entertaining, the year's second sperm donor rom-com leaves no embarrassing stains.

An Education: Cinema's Top Syllabus

With kids back to school and education funding cut, what's the best way to educate your child? Cinema.

https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/166174thetown_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/553233thehole_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/246109i__mstillheretop.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/361169wintersbone2.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/786488otherguys_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/949311tamara_drewe_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/463534gtd_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/937245cyrus_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/136265therunaways2.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/812106lastexorcism_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/139660switch_top.jpg https://i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/191392aneducationstill.jpg

Star Ratings

Excellent   
Very Good
Good
Average
Terrible

Have Your Say

What do you want to see at the LFF?
 

Login



iFlicks on Twitter

Home Reviews Cinema Winter's Bone
Winter's Bone Print E-mail
Written by Ivan Radford   
Friday, 17 September 2010 12:18
Director: Debra Granik
Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, John Hawkes, Dale Dickey, Garrett Dillahunt
Certificate: 15

Hands up who knows what the Ozark Mountains look like? Well, you won't soon forget after watching this bleak thriller. Winter's Bone is the hot tip for awards success this year, and it's not hard to see why: you haven't seen a landscape so unwelcoming since No Country for Old Men or The Road. Oh yes, Debra Granik's woodlands are bleak. Bleak bleak bleak.


Ree (Lawrence) is a 17 year old living a hard-boiled life. Her crystal meth-cooking dad has disappeared and if he doesn't make his trial, Ree gets kicked off the family farm. Along with her younger brother and sister. And their dazed sick mum, who can't lift a finger to make ends meet.


Chopping firewood, fending off threats from the local Sheriff (Dillahunt), teaching the kids how to shoot a squirrel - Ree is a tough Missouri chick, "bread and buttered". So it's inevitable that she shoulders the burden of the manhunt herself, determined to uncover the whereabouts of her father. The trouble is, the people round Missouri don't like folk what ask questions.


Hiking through a forest of dead wood and harsh faces, Ree pushes her way into the living room of her uncle Teardrop (Hawkes). He warns her off nicely once, with his mouth. Others (like Dale Dickey's menacing Merab) aren't so kind. Soaking up the neighbourhood's intimidating atmosphere, Winter's Bone draws you further into the murky woods of violence and burnt out drug factories.


Granik and Anne Rosellini's screenplay is a simple affair, allowing Jennifer Lawrence's grim determination to keep you hooked. And it works - she does downbeat country girl without ever bordering on redneck cliché. The rest of the cast are the shadows that surround her, John Hawkes' scraggy dog a particularly potent blend of silence and hidden brutality.


Hanging the whole thing on a few standout scenes of tension, the neo-noir is at its best when barely a word is spoken; locals confronting Lawrence outside a barn, Garrett Dillahunt's lawman pulling Teardrop over on the highway, his gun waiting to be fired. It feels a lot like Brick, a bleak detective story relocated from the 1940s to the cold white of modern day.


The portent builds to a dark sense of closure, expertly framed by Granik's unhurried camera. It's a patient and unsettling adaptation of Daniel Woodrell's novel, summed up by Jennifer Lawrence's continued survival in the stark and unforgiving countryside. She should be rewarded with an Oscar for her efforts.


VERDICT


A cold and bleak modern mystery, Winter's Bone is a frostbitten pleasure.  

 

Your rating

( 2 Votes ) 

 

 

Tags:
  • brick
  • dale dickey
  • daniel woodrell
  • debra granik
  • detective
  • garrett dillahunt
  • jennifer lawrence
  • john hawkes
  • missouri
  • mystery
  • no country for old men
  • noir
 

Add your comment

Your name:
Your email:
Comment:
  The word for verification. Lowercase letters only with no spaces.
Word verification: