Cut Bank (2014) [Blu-ray]
Thriller
Tagline: Good Folks. Bad Deeds.
Looking to leave hisy town of Cut Bank, Dwayne McLaren (Liam Hemsworth) hatches a get-rich scheme to get himself out. But when Dwayne's plan backfires and he's swept into a murder investigation led by the local sheriff (John Malkovich), he discovers that
Cut Bank is a small town full of big - and deadly - surprises in this star-powered thriller filled with clever plot twists, dark humor, and unforgettable characters.
Storyline: Dwayne McLaren has been looking for a way out of his small town upbringing of CUT BANK, MT since he graduated high school several years earlier. When he finds himself in the wrong place at the right time, he jumps at a
chance to pursue a better life in a bigger city with his girlfriend Cassandra. But luck doesn't exist in Cut Bank, and this perceived good fortune is quickly followed by a flood of bad karma. Written by anonymous
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, May 26, 2015 If the Coen Brothers and Quentin Tarantino agreed to collaborate on a picture, but then perhaps came to creative blows sometime during the shoot, the result might be
something very like Cut Bank, an intermittently engaging thriller mixing the isolated location and accruing body count of Fargo with the florid, almost twee, verbal perspicacity of a film like Pulp Fiction. The Fargo reference
is perhaps particularly apt, not just due to some plot similarities and an overall likeness in tone, but also because director Matt Shakman has worked on the Fargo television series and has engaged the show's co-stars Billy Bob Thornton and Oliver
Platt to appear here. The main thrust of the plot concerns strapping young Dwayne McLaren (Liam Hemsworth, looking like he's passing a whole slew of kidney stones throughout the film), a kid who is sick of living in the stultifying confines of Cut Bank,
Montana, the supposed "coldest place in the nation." Out in an impossibly scenic field one day with his pretty girlfriend Cassandra (Teresa Palmer), Dwayne pulls out a home video camera to capture Cassandra rehearsing for an upcoming beauty pageant which
may provide the pair with a little nest egg to aid in their attempts to get the heck out of Dodge (and/or Cut Bank). In a perhaps winking reference to outings like Blow-Up, Dwayne instead manages to catch a horrifying murder that takes place in the
background. That in turn sets a whole cartwheeling series of events into motion which, in true Fargo style, results in a rather gruesome body count and a number of once hidden intrigues which slowly but surely burst into the cold (coldest?) light
of day.
Cut Bank actually begins with a sequence devoted to local mailman Georgie Wits (Bruce Dern), a guy who in this film's overly pretentious fashion is almost always referred to as "Mr. Georgie Wits," at least by the local postmistress, the
similarly titled Mrs. Margaret (Joyce Robbins). Georgie seems like a crusty old guy, not especially possessed of a "bedside manner," or whatever the analogous courtly demeanor might be for a mailman, and he's also a bit of a dirty old man, as his
proclivity to spy on the local cheerleading team aptly proves. Georgie turns out to be the victim of the heinous shooting Dwayne captures on tape, and it also turns out that according to Sheriff Vogel (John Malkovich), a character who insists everyone
call him "Sheriff Vogel" at all times, this is the first murder that Cut Bank has ever experienced. It won't be the last.
A probably too over convoluted intersection of competing subplots also involve Dwayne's boss (and Cassandra's father) Big Stan Steeley (Billy Bob Thornton), who runs a couple of automotive repair lots and who has an obvious if curiously underdeveloped
history with Sheriff Vogel. Another late breaking history between two characters involves Dwayne's incapacitated father, a wheelchair and oxygen tube encumbered elder for whom Dwayne cares, and the character who turns out to be the lynch pin
(spelled that way for a reason) around whom much of the plot revolves, local recluse taxidermist (is there any other kind?), Derby Milton (Michael Stuhlbarg, creepily excellent). While Sheriff Vogel stumbles and bumbles through the murder investigation,
one which soon includes at least one other body, good ol' Derby, who is distraught that a package he was expecting has gone missing after Georgie's murder and the subsequent disappearance of his mail truck, simply puts on his "thinking" ball cap and
pretty much solves the mystery single handed, dispatching a series of people along the way, leaving the poor sheriff to arrive at various crime scenes a few minutes too late.
There's quite a bit to like in Cut Bank, including some showy but fun performances by the likes of Dern (who shall we say sticks around after that opening sequence) and Oliver Platt, playing a distracted postal inspector who shows up to confirm the
facts of the case and facilitate a handsome reward to Dwayne for having caught the murder on videotape. Thornton and Malkovich are also effective, albeit in somewhat more tamped down roles. But screenwriter Roberto Patino tips his hand way too
early with a reveal that offers a supposedly surprising denouement involving the ins and outs of the killing and its happenstance capture on video (this is really not much of a spoiler, as the film gets to it rather quickly in the overall scheme of
things).
Cut Bank does show some signs of having been tinkered with at some point, for there are an undue number of unexplored story points that are at least mentioned but never really fully detailed or explained. We're left to pretty much ferret out the
backstory involving Sheriff Vogel and Big Stan, one that evidently involved a woman named Celine, and are similarly left to wonder exactly what's going on with the possibly psychopathic Derby, a guy who perhaps isn't only stuffing animals and whose
"special project" in the basement is in need of some serious exposition. Why do all the other townspeople keep mentioning they thought Derby was dead once they bump into him? This is a recurring "gag" in the film which never lands because the audience is
never given any context to place it into. In what is perhaps yet another cinematic reference, this time to Kiss Me Deadly, that "parcel" that Derby is so obsessed with retrieving appears to be the MacGuffin propelling the plot forward, but it's the
mere artifact itself and not what's inside that seems to be the key.
There are a couple of very strong scenes in Cut Bank, including a fantastic showdown between Dern and Stuhlbarg and a nice Hitchcockian moment when Hemsworth desperately is trying to call a cohort, perhaps getting ready to leave an incriminating
message on an answering machine, at exactly the same moment the good Sheriff turns up at the guy's house to interview him. Some of the other sidebars, like the bizarre Miss Cut Bank Pageant, seem to be there only to provide a bit of "local color."
Cut Bank is obviously derivative, and it never quite recovers from spilling its veritable beans too early in the overall arc of the story, but there are several quite compelling elements here, not the least of which is Bruce Dern's completely gonzo
take on Georgie Wits, a guy who has most definitely "gone postal," though perhaps not in the way typically assumed. Occasionally fun and more than occasionally a bit gruesome, Cut Bank is certainly no Fargo, but it does go a bit,
anyway. Technical merits are very good to excellent, and with caveats noted, Cut Bank comes Recommended.
[CSW] -2.8- Very unusual plot line, with unexpected twists and turns. I do think the answer to the "parcel" question was answered a little too early in the drama, but other than that this movie is tight and involving all the way through. Excellent cast!
Don't miss it… once.
[V4.0-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box
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