Megan Leavey (2017) [Blu-ray]
Biography | Drama | War
Megan Leavey honors its real-life subjects with a sensitive, uplifting drama whose honest emotion more than makes up for its mild approach to the story.
Storyline: Based on the true life story of a young Marine corporal whose unique discipline and bond with her military combat dog saved many lives during their deployment in Iraq. When she is assigned to clean up the K9 unit after
a disciplinary hearing, Leavey identifies with a particularly aggressive dog, Rex, and is given the chance to train him. Over the course of their service, Megan and Rex completed more than 100 missions until an IED explosion injures them, putting their
fate in jeopardy. Written by Bleecker Street
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, August 30, 2017 Megan Leavey tells a touching true story of self-discovery, service, and activism. It's the story of a young woman, meandering through life, struggling to make
ends meet, and failing to make an impact but finding her calling thousands of miles from home where she and her canine companion save lives and make a difference in the world and in the lives of those who depend on her. It's a classic story of the human
spirit, directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite (in her debut feature film) with a grace and understanding of the simple bond that forms and the purpose it serves, personally and in a much wider arena, too. In a dangerous world where bullets and bomb blasts
physically harm and red tape breaks bonds, the film explores that connective spirit between man and animal and the human will to set things right, whether in war or at home.
Megan Leavey (Kate Mara) lives a directionless life. She struggles to connect with people, cannot hold down a dead-end job, and her mother (Edie Falco) has had enough of laziness. In a desperate move to find some purpose and escape the challenges of her
life, she enlists in the Marine Corps. It's a fight to get through basic training, but she perseveres and graduates. But her old ways come back to haunt her. She's caught drunk and urinating behind a building on base. Her punishment: cleaning up after
dogs and standing in as an attack victim. But she grows fond of one dog in particular, Rex, and pushes to become a dog handler. She's eventually accepted into the program and gradually finds success and bonds with Rex. She and Rex are deployed to Iraq
where, despite the dangers, they form an unbreakable bond that will be tested both in country and back home.
Megan Leavey is more a love story than it is a war film. It's less an action film and more concerned with the bond between a woman and her dog. She is a woman who, through the dog and the heroic actions in which they engage, discovers not only her
purpose but a lifelong friend. It's a story of bonding, companionship, friendship, and survival. Survival is not only about making it off the battlefield alive. It's also about saving their friendship, how Megan must speak for Rex and advocate for his
well-being, which is directly tied to her well-being. The movie takes a rather drastic shift in the third act where Megan has found herself, but at the same time lost herself. Long gone is the old Megan, drunk and directionless, replaced by another Megan
who has lost her friend but has gained the courage and wherewithal to fight back against a simple injustice that has broken her heart but not completely broken her spirit. It's here where the film finds its true purpose; everything before only carries the
character to this point where the transformation from nobody to reluctant warrior to champion of her cause sees her come full-circle as a person.
The film is well made, agreeably paced and rightly focused on character and story. Action scenes are sufficiently intense and seemingly realistic, but Director Gabriela Cowperthwaite rightly makes them plot-advnaincg devices that sees the bond between
Megan and Rex grow. All of it only propels the narrative to that critical third act that reveals Megan's path from personal darkness into the light, figuratively for sure and literally in one case in the film's beautiful culminating sequence. Kate Mara is
excellent as the title character. Her journey along a very clearly defined arc hits all the right notes, whether early in the film as she struggle to find herself and her place in the world, midway as her personal transformation and relationship with Rex
develops, and on the other end as she's tested anew but armed with a new outlook on life and confidence in herself, even as her ordeal has dragged her down but not weighed her down or suffocated her entirely. The film further enjoys several good
supporting performances from Edie Falco as Megan's mother and Ramón Rodríguez as her boyfriend and fellow dog handler, Matt Morales.
Megan Leavey tells an honest, touching true story of love, friendship, and fighting the good fight on the battlefield and off of it. It's also a story of personal transformation, growth in courage, and finding a place in the world. It's well acted
and nicely assembled, one of the more agreeable and heartfelt films of the year. Universal's Blu-ray offers good video and audio but only one brief supplement. Recommended.
Trivia:- Kate Mara (who plays Megan) and the real Megan Leavey both grew up in suburbs of New York City and both were born in 1983.
- Before the end credits, there was footage of Rex in the pool and photos of him and the real Megan Leavey.
- Kate Mara played the Kentucky widow Sarah Fenn in Shooter
- EMI - Extra Military Instruction
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[CSW] -3.6- It is in essence a dog story that is quite touching and well done. Kate Mara (Megan Leavey) gives the character great verisimilitude and the training sequences ring true to me. None of it was overdone and overplayed. It will make you
appreciate the role of the K 9 corps and their handlers. Even if you're not a great dog lover you will fall in love with the dog that plays Rex. It is an emotionally-filled movie that some might call a tear-jerker but not in the usual sense of feeling
sorry for something. It did make me appreciate even more the bravery and sacrifices of our men and women in our military. Megan and Rex win this movie and me… completely.
[V4.0-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box
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