Review: The Grey
An emotionally broken Liam Neeson is one of a group of fuel plant workers
in Alaska whose plane crashes in the harsh wilderness, killing some of the men
on impact. Neeson, going through some kind of personal grief (we see him acting
suicidally early on, thankfully not going through with it), nonetheless acts as
leader, as he was employed by the company as a sharpshooter to take out any
threat from wild beasts. Yes, not only are the men having to battle the weather
and possible starvation, but there are hungry, nasty wolves out there ready to
pounce. Frank Grillo plays the most antagonistic of the workers, whilst others
are played by Dermot Mulroney (“Young Guns”), Nonso Anozie (“Brighton
Rock”), and Dallas Roberts (a million miles from the chilling surgeon he
played in “Tell-Tale”).
Director Joe Carnahan (“Narc”, the underrated “Smokin’ Aces”)
and star Liam Neeson atone for “The A-Team” with this harsh (really harsh), macho 2011 man vs. nature
flick. Aside from a rather monotonous voiceover narration that is soon dropped,
Liam Neeson is perfect in this (Bradley Cooper was apparently the original
choice, and I can’t imagine that working at
all). I’m not sure if he was using cinema for cathartic reasons, but his
own real life tragedy was on my mind throughout. The scene where Neeson
prepares a dying man for the inevitable and calms him down is quite affecting
and even beautiful in a gritty, macho kinda way. In fact, were it not for the
lack of depth afforded supporting characters (Frank Grillo should be commended
for not quite overplaying his 2D role), and some of Mr. Carnahan’s stylistic
choices, this film would’ve been even better.
None of the other actors get much to chew on (Grillo and Dallas Roberts
come off best), but at least Dermot Mulroney gets one helluva final scene. As
is his wont, Carnahan and his cinematographer Masanobu Takayanagi (“The
Warrior”) adopt a muted, dark, and grainy visage for the film. The grain
doesn’t add texture, it adds fake dirt (and clearly added in post), and during
night scenes it’s a tad dark and murky. That said, I must say that even the
occasional use of shaky cam wasn’t as bothersome to me because it makes the
wolves seem more ferocious than they probably really were on set. It is
certainly employed a lot more effectively than in “The A-Team”. The day
scenes, despite the grain, are also really well-shot and attractive. Meanwhile,
grainy or not, if that shot of the wolf pack’s eyes peering out of darkness
doesn’t send chills down your spine, then you’re clearly even more disabled
than I am (I’m a paraplegic, just in case you think I was being horrible for
the sake of it).
I have no doubt that some of the wolves’ eyes are fake (either CG or
prosthetics), but they’re more convincing than usual. That surprises me given
the names Greg Nicotero and Howard Berger are in the credits, and those guys
tend to be pretty uneven (The FX in “From Dusk Til Dawn” being rather
fake, for instance). The sound design is terrific too, here, and the film has
the biggest and most effective ‘jump’ scare I’ve had in ages. You will not see it coming. There are also few
things more blood-curdling than the sound of a wolf pack howling. The opening
plane crash is overly stylised and crappy, however. “Cast Away” set the
benchmark for plane crashes and hasn’t been improved upon since.
Although not original or especially brilliant, this film will be loved by
a particular audience. It’s one grim, tough sonofabitch, and I don’t think I’ve
seen a film that more effectively encapsulates the fear of impending,
inevitable death. Scripted by Carnahan and Ian Mackenzie Jeffers (the equally
grim but uninteresting vigilante flick “Death Sentence”) from the
latter’s short story, this is a solid genre film. Stay through the end credits
for an hilariously macho final moment.
Rating: B-
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