Leonardo DiCaprio: Surviving the Wild Prior Today's Fully Connected World in “The Revenant”
Surviving the wild by pure
instinct prior the advent of emergency call buttons such as 911 and high-tech
gadgets is what makes the latest Academy Award nominee Leonardo DiCaprio film,
“The Revenant” this year’s highly-thrilling cinematic experience – directed,
produced and co-written by Academy Award winning filmmaker Alejandro G.
Iñárritu.
Inspired
by true events from the sparse accounts of the legendary fur trapper and trader
Hugh Glass, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, Glass became a revenant, someone
believed to be dead who has returned to life after going through a harrowing
series of events fighting for his life when left to survive in the wild set
during the 19th century American Frontier.
Immersing
audiences in the unparalleled beauty, mystery and dangers of life in 1823
America, the film explores one man’s transformation in a quest for survival. “The
Revenant” explores primal drives not only for life itself but for dignity,
justice, faith, family and home. The
film’s wilderness-based production mirrored the harsh conditions Glass and
company actually lived through in the 1800s. Iñárritu and his whole cast and
crew were up for all that was thrown at them, welcoming the challenges of
shooting in Canada and Argentina, regions known for unpredictable weather and
untouched wilds, in order to fully understand the experience of fur trappers in
the early 19th century.
Glass’s
mythology began in 1823, when he was among thousands joining the fur trade, a
driving new force in the US economy. It was a time when many saw the wild as a
spiritual void that demanded to be tamed and conquered by the steeliest of men.
And so they poured into the unknown, plying unmapped rivers, disappearing into
impossibly lush forests, seeking not only excitement and adventure but also
profits -- often in fierce competition with the Native tribes for whom these
lands had long been home.
Many
such men died anonymously, but Glass entered the annals of American folklore by
flat-out refusing to die. His legend sparked after he faced one of the West’s
most feared dangers: a startled grizzly
bear. For even the most tested frontiersmen
that should have been the end. But not
for Glass, in Iñárritu’s telling of the tale, a mauled Glass clings to life –
then suffers a human betrayal that fuels him to continue at any cost. In spite
of tremendous loss, Glass pulls himself from an early grave – clawing his way
through a gauntlet of unknown perils and unfamiliar cultures on a journey that
becomes not just a search for reckoning but for redemption. As Glass moves
through the frontier in turmoil, he comes to reject the urge for destruction
that once drove him. He has become a
“revenant” -- one returned from the dead.
One
of the movie’s most thrilling scene, the bear attack that threatens to end
Glass’s life, immediately took DiCaprio into a mano-a-mano struggle with one of
nature’s most skilled predators. “The bear attack was incredibly difficult and
arduous,” DiCaprio recalls, “but it’s profoundly moving. In the film, Alejandro
puts you there almost like a fly buzzing around this attack, so that you feel
the breath of Glass and the breath of the bear. What he achieved is beyond
anything I’ve seen. Glass has to find a
way to deal with this full-grown animal on top of him. He’s at the brink of death – and you are
fully immersed in this moment with him.”
“The
Revenant is a story of harsh survival but also one of inspirational hope,”
Iñárritu says. “For me, the important
part was to convey this adventure with a sense of wonder and discovery, as an
exploration of both nature and human nature.”
“The
Revenant” opens in cinemas February 3 from 20th Century Fox to be
distributed by Warner Bros.
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