Experience the Immersive Power of “The Revenant” On the Big Screen on February 3
Leonardo DiCaprio has portrayed a kaleidoscopic array of characters –
from Howard Hughes to Jay Gatsby to Wolf of Wall Street’s profligate Jordan
Belfort – but the role of the Hugh Glass in “The Revenant” was an entirely new
challenge, taking the actor into borderlands that few in our modern world have
experienced. It is DiCaprio’s most
intensely physical role and at the same time, an almost wordlessly raw
performance.
Academy
Award®-winning director Alejandro G. Iñárritu brings the legend of Hugh Glass
to the screen with “The Revenant,” an epic adventure set in the unchartered
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. Part thriller, part wilderness journey,
The Revenant explores primal drives not only for life itself but for dignity,
justice, faith, family and home.
DiCaprio was also
enthralled by Iñárritu’s aim to bring Glass’s story to life with a realism that
would plunge audiences into life in primordial Western lands long before
cowboys and outlaws. “I’ve never really
seen this time period in American history put on film, so that interested me,”
he says. “This was a unique time and
place in the history of the American West because it was far more wild than
what we think of as ‘the wild, wild West.’
It was like the Amazon, a completely unknown wilderness, a no man’s land
where few laws applied. These trappers who came from Europe and the East Coast
had to learn to live a life in the middle of the elements -- surviving like any
other animal in the wilderness.”
The director
emphasizes that DiCaprio faced tests no actor could fully prepare for in his
performance. “Leo was working in the
toughest of conditions, under a challenging wardrobe, in extreme make-up, going
to the most emotionally uncomfortable and dark places. But no matter what he is
going through, something immediate comes to life when Leo is in front of the
camera. There’s an incredible power,” Iñárritu observes.
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.”
DiCaprio did many
of his own stunts: he was buried in
snow, went naked in minus five-degree weather and jumped into a frigid river,
each moment bringing him more in touch with Glass’s will. But as he makes his
way, Glass does not just abide – he also changes profoundly, something DiCaprio
reveals in a multi-hued range of subtle details that add up to the film’s
stirring climax.
“Throughout,
there’s that question of whether some kind of revenge is ultimately the thing
that will quench Glass’s thirst at the end of the day. But the need to continue
on becomes something more to him…it becomes a kind of spiritual endeavor,” he
concludes.
An immersive
experience to be fully experienced only in theatres, get ready when “The
Revenant” opens in cinemas on February 3
from 20th Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.
AVAILABLE IN IMAX THEATERS ONLY FOR ONE WEEK!
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