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Chris Knipp
05-03-2013, 10:45 PM
Jeff Nichols: MUDD (2012)

http://img339.imageshack.us/img339/3130/mudmcconaughey600x316.jpg
TYE SHERIDAN, MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY, AND JACOB LOFLAND IN MUD

Keeping secrets and growing up

The increasingly ubiquitous and ever more satisfying Matthew McConaughey is the temptation and excitement for two southern boys in Mud, the title designating the man's symbolically tarnished name. You know McConaughey has arrived when Sam Shepard appears playing his father. Or the closest thing to a father this romantic outcast has ever known. And you know this is a tale of adolescent disillusionment when two boys rush back and forth to a man hiding out on an island. There is a motorboat mysteriously caught high up in some trees by an Arkansas flood. That boat will come down and the man will sail away, if he survives, but the more loyal and passionate of the two boys, Ellis (Tye Sheridan of The Tree of Life) will be left in the lurch. This movie is by Jeff Nichols, and it hasn't the crazy power of his last one Take Shelter, but in its seeming simplicity is growing accomplishment. Mud effortlessly achieves a nice sweet rhythm and is long on classic southern atmosphere and good performances. It could have done with more narrative economy, but to compensate, its sense of the world of boyhood is acute.

Ellis and his best mate Neckbone (Jacob Lofland) head toward a big wide opening in the river in their outboard motor and it's like Lighting Out for the Territory. They have designs on the boat up in the tree, but Mud appears out of nowhere to claim it. He weaves lovely stories and cuts a deal to have the boys help him. They'd have paid him, of course, for this privilege. After a while it emerges that he's hiding here because he's wanted for killing a man in anger for misusing a lady. The boys have to help him evade the bounty hunters who're after him and unite him with his true love Jupiter (Reese Witherspoon).

The boys are only 14, but Ellis, hell bent on growing up, keeps socking boys or men bigger then he is, he picks as a girlfriend (Bonnie Sturdivant) who's an upperclassman in high school, and his parents (Ray McKinnon and Sarah Paulson) are breaking up, filling him with disillusion and insecurity. Mud packs in the coming-of-age ordeals, but the toughest is realizing that Mud isn't a good man and rarely tells the truth. For an easy example: Tom Blankenship (Shepard), Mud says, went to Yale and was a hit man for the CIA. Actually he was a sharpshooter for the Army.

Ellis' trips back and forth up the river to the island, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by the more cynical Neckbone, feed the same kind of fragile dreams all boys tend to have, dreams that boys who live in a wild natural environment like this tidewater basin can explore more freely than most. These boys also may be freer because of their family's marginal existence. Neckbone has no real family. He's raised by his dubious and harsh uncle Galen (Michael Shannon). Ellis' dad barely makes ends meet diving for fish and selling them. Like the 12-year-old protagonist of Chris Menges' 1992 Florida drama Chris Cross, Ellis is making himself day by day, and Mud is a fragile metaphor, whom Peter Debruge of Variety calls (http://variety.com/2012/film/reviews/mud-1117947649/) " a wily figure of endangered Southern chivalry." Mud swears eternal love and eternal loyalty. But when push comes to shove, he lacks the security to carry out these promises. Maybe Ellis will make something out of them when he grows up -- if that doesn't come too soon. He reads his romanticism and belief in love into Mud. But that has to bear the disreputableness of Mud's life, and the threat of vigilante justice represented by Joe Don Baker, father of the man he killed.

As Mike D'Angelo, who first saw Mud at Cannes last year feeling it misplaced there because of its conventional "ripping yarn," perceptively describes (http://www.avclub.com/articles/mud,96947/)McConaughey as playing Mud as if "Tom Sawyer had grown up and gone horrifically wrong, effortlessly projecting rascally charm with a hint of underlying menace." McConaughey has one of his best and richest southern characters here, far beyond the simple unctuousness of his Bernie or Magic Mike roles. And what makes Mud as good as it is comes from the additional fact that he's not even who it's all really about. There's even a shootout, and a snake bite death scare, and Nichols has welded it all seamlessly together -- if he had only, as I said, pared it down a bit; but this is the South, and growing up can't be rushed.

Mud debuted at Cannes and was shown at Sundance, opening 26th April 2013 (US), 1 May (France: excellent reviews, Allociné press rating 4.0) and 10 May (UK).

cinemabon
06-25-2013, 12:33 PM
“Mud” – directed by Jeff Nichols

From the very start of “Mud” we accept the rural concept of intimacy through the brilliant cinematography of Adam Stone, who had to shoot the entire film with steadycam. Shot on river locations in Arkansas, “Mud” is more than a movie about “coming of age,” as it speaks to the failure of relationships when men make assumptions about the women in their lives. Mud is the name given to Matthew McConaughey’s character, because as we learn through the plot’s progression, he sort of emerged from the muck of the Mississippi River. Based on his admiration of Mark Twain’s “Tom Sawyer,” Nichols fashioned his screenplay also about everyday life along the Mississippi River and how “common folks” make their living off the dying art of fishing as a means of income. Nichols weaves three stories simultaneously – Mud is a refugee from the law for killing a man, whom the boys (Ellis and Neckbone) both befriend and help; Ellis’ parents are going through marital strife and the wife – raised on the river – seeks to escape her abject poverty and drab lifestyle which the father clings to; and finally, Ellis over-simplified evolution as a teenager attracted to girls but unable to grasp the ritualistic concepts of courtship.

Filmed in his home state of Arkansas, Nichols paints a rich tapestry of color and detail with close up shots of daddy long legs crawling through cracked dry mud and glorious sunsets over the river as a backdrop. The lighting is all natural and the camera moves effortlessly through the dirty windows of a riverboat into the private lives of these uneducated simple folk who all seek to find some level of happiness in their stressful lives. Ellis (Tye Sheridan – “Tree of Life”) and Neckbone (local Arkansas actor Jacob Lofland chosen from a cattle call of 2000 actors because he knew how to drive a boat and ride a motorcycle) have a daily routine of exploring the river. In their adventures, they discover a larger cabin cruiser snagged up in a tree during the latest flood. The boys intend (somehow) to claim the ship as their own, only to discover on their most recent visit that it is now occupied. This is when they meet Mud for the first time.

One wonders if Mud is an apparition or angelic. His boot prints have Christian-type crosses that leave an impression in the wet sand on the beach. In fact, his trail leads to nowhere and then mysteriously stops. When the boys turn around, Mud is standing there behind them. This guardian angel theme continues throughout the film as we learn that Mud, fascinated with Juniper (Reese Witherspoon) since childhood, has repeatedly helped her out of desperate situations when she goes from one bad relationship to another – the last one being the final straw. When Mud discovers her last boyfriend has “thrown her down the stairs and tried to kill her,” Mud shoots and kills the man. Wanted by the police and hunted by the man’s father bent on vengeance (Joe Don Baker of “Walking Tall” fame), Mud hides out in a place where he feels at home – an unoccupied island in the middle of the river. Through a series of touching if not pathetic scenes, Mud expresses his twisted romantic notion of the world and women in general. Taking Mud’s theme about love to heart, Ellis tries (and fails) his best to secure the charms of an older teenager. The girl humors the boy with one date, but then rebuffs and humiliates Ellis later. When the law and the bounty hunters turn up the heat on Mud, he seeks help from Old man Blankenship, whose houseboat resides directly across from Ellis’ house. Mud builds up a great scenario for his mentor in the boys’ minds. But we soon discover, through Tom Blankenship (Sam Shepard) that Mud creates his own version of the world, usually a fanciful one – he is not a former CIA agent but once a sniper for the Army.

With the family dynamic, the elusive escapes from the bounty hunters, and anticipation of completing the ship before he is captured, “Mud” packs in plenty of suspense and action to maintain its simplistic but equally profound themes of romantic failure when it comes to personal relationships. Though slightly misogynistic in its perspective, “Mud” is an intimate portrait of rural America beautifully told through its photography and expert acting. While the dialogue is unremarkable, McConaughey, Shepard, Reese, and the rest of the cast bring an outstanding level of credibility to their performances through the skill of their craft which lifts this modest tale out of the ordinary into a microcosm of psychological underpinnings as to why we fail at love more than we succeed. “Mud” has won praise from so many critics and audience members because in the end, we see our own failings on the screen that we can easily identify and through Jeff Nichol’s expert direction, the meaning flows off the screen like the great river itself, with great panache.

Chris Knipp
06-25-2013, 01:32 PM
One wonders if Mud is an apparition or angelic. Interesting thought, and this does fit in with memories of Mark Twain. However if he's that, he's one gone wrong (D'Angelo). Glad you liked MUD even if our interpretations differ at some points. This ranks as one of my clear favorites of the year's US films so far in theatrical release, or at least of the summer. What others? THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES, UPSTREAM COLOR, DIRTY WARS, FAST & FURIOUS 6, BEFORE MIDNIGHT (yielding to critical majority on that one), SPRINGBREAKERS. There are some other docs. There are not many clearcut US winners (aprt from blockbusters or genre: I would recommend seeing THE EAST and MAN OF STEEL) so far. Note I have seen a whole lot of other new films, mostly not US or not yet released. Thanks for this review, c.

cinemabon
06-25-2013, 02:36 PM
Sad to note this film premiered at Cannes over a year ago and didn't find a distributor until last November when Nichols finally got Lionsgate to back him in a limited distribution. Surprisingly, "Mud" has made back all of its budget and surpassed Nichols' and Lionsgate's expectations for BO.

The link between Nichols and Twain is significant in that both men chose as subjects life on the Mississippi both then and now. Nichol's choice of Mud for the main character's name must stem from the river itself; just as Twain's name does - an interesting parallel and pure speculation on my part.

Chris Knipp
06-25-2013, 03:56 PM
Like the song:


When the sun goes down, the tide goes out,
The people gather 'round and they all begin to shout,
"Hey! Hey! Uncle Dud,
It's a treat to beat your feet on the Mississippi Mud.
It's a treat to beat your feet on the Mississippi Mud".
--etc.