Reviews & Columns
Reviews
DVD
TV on DVD
Blu-ray
4K UHD
International DVDs
In Theaters
Reviews by Studio
Video Games

Features
Collector Series DVDs
Easter Egg Database
Interviews
DVD Talk Radio
Feature Articles

Columns
Anime Talk
DVD Savant
Horror DVDs
The M.O.D. Squad
Art House
HD Talk
Silent DVD

discussion forum
DVD Talk Forum

Resources
DVD Price Search
Customer Service #'s
RCE Info
Links

Columns




Lost River

Warner Bros. // R // May 5, 2015
List Price: $29.98 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Thomas Spurlin | posted May 16, 2015 | E-mail the Author
The Film:




Drive and Blue Valentine actor Ryan Gosling can't be accused of not swinging for the fences in his directorial debut, Lost River. A dark allegorical fantasy set in what's rapidly approaching a modern American ghost town, the film explores poverty and monstrous authority in lawless surroundings through vivid surrealist images, suggestive of both Gosling's personal experience with other directors and pronounced artistic influences ranging from Italian Giallo to the work of David Lynch and Terrence Malick. Before attempting something so ambitious and figurative in his first time at bat, Gosling probably should've gotten his bearings behind the camera with more cogent screenwriting than his own. Despite the multihued, intricately-composed language of his visuals, Lost River ends up being a disjointed and hollow patchwork of enigmas that feel borrowed from other works instead of inspired by them, resulting in provocative sensations that service indulgent vignettes instead of a coherent, original fable with something clear to say.

Gosling shoots Lost River through a rundown, textured suburb of Detroit, hammering home the point that the film's eponymous town has been mostly vacated due to harsh conditions and a crumbling financial climate. A few stragglers remain, including a struggling single mother of two, Billy (Christina Hendricks), whose teenage son Bones (Iain De Caestecker) strips dilapidated houses for metal and spends his downtime fixing up a car. Behind on their house payments, Billy's forced to resort to other means of income to appease bank/loan manager Dave (Ben Mendelsohn), guiding her to a bizarre and macabre burlesque that's emerged in the wake of the town's despondence. Bones, in the meantime, dodges the pursuits of the town's dangerously violent Bully (Matt Smith), while developing a relationship with the girl next door (Saoirse Ronan). Through her, Bones learns about the dark "spell" cast over their town, and how he might be able to remove the curse by exploring its submerged secrets.

With Gasper Noe's go-to cinematographer Benoit Debie guiding the point-of-view through imaginative angles and sobering perspectives on conversations, the haunting aesthetic tempo of Lost River can't be stressed enough. Abstractions involving half-underwater streetlamps and a doorway framed by a gargoyle's face form an expressive juxtaposition with weather-beaten houses and stores near collapse and crumbling walls scrawled with graffiti. Gosling plays a lot with moody lighting, too, especially surrounding Billy's new place of employment, namely in the hazy pink basement designed for more lascivious activities that finds a way of being both soothing and unsettling at the same time. It's never dull to look at, whatsoever, and the events that transpire throughout the setting -- peeled flesh, spreading fire, exploration through murky green water -- tap into some rather intuitive and raw cinematic sensations while attempting to blur the line between elevated reality and deceptive fantasy.

Whether it's to emphasize the despondent tone of the town or simply a matter of shallow characterization, the people maneuvering through the ruins of Lost River lack enough intriguing traits to bolster the dramatic dire-straits side of this parable. Lack of talent isn't to blame, either, since Gosling reached into his pool of talented co-stars and almost co-stars from past projects in assembling his cast: Christina Hendricks from Drive; Ben Mendelsohn and Eva Mendes from The Place Beyond the Pines; and Saoirse Ronan before Gosling exited The Lovely Bones. Suitable performances appear left and right as a result, including former Whovian Matt Smith as the intimidating and scissor-happy overlord of the vacant town, but they're ultimately filling out amorphous or on-the-nose characters surrounding Bones' indistinct shell of a personality. Minimalist features may have worked well for the rebels Gosling has played in the past, but they ultimately sink within Agents of SHIELD actor Iain De Caestecker, despite his burdened gazes and soft-spoken tone with Ronan's next-door curio, Rat.

Disappointingly, the narrative flow and dialogue of Lost River tend to be deliberately undefined and sporadic, with little connective tissue between the stories formed around the hopelessness and jeopardy of the abandoned town. Because of that, the film's obscure beauty demands to be processed on a scene-by-scene basis instead of as an interwoven, metaphorical fairytale, shining a light on the lack of innovation and overt admiration for other surrealist filmmakers inside Gosling's whimsical flourishes. He seems to want his 90-minute directorial debut to be his Valhalla Rising, his Blue Velvet, and his Enter the Void all in one shot: an ominous and visceral collage of metaphors and odes to the fall of the American dream, hurled against a canvas in hopes that they'll form an adult half-fantasy. Despite being vibrant and intended for something grander, it ends up being this decadent mess with a self-satisfied otherworldly streak, underscored by a bizarrely triumphant and cataclysmic end that overestimates one's investment in its equilibrium between what's practical and what's of the imagination.


The Blu-ray:





Video and Audio:

Lost River shores up on Blu-ray through a largely terrific 2.35:1-framed, 1080p AVC transfer of both digital and film sources, placing strong emphasis on color richness and texture complexity. Most colors in the film are elevated for effect, from skin tones and Christina Hendricks' deep red locks to the blue and purple lights of the burlesque, which creates a beautiful if overindulgent high-definition experience. Contrast is mostly rather satisfying, projecting deep black levels and discernible details in shadows during daytime, but nighttime sequences struggle with oppressive contrast balance that tend to move in on elements in the dark. Detail clarity is phenomenal across the board: bloody tendons underneath skin, cracked and dirty walls of dilapidated buildings, billows of fire and muck in deep-green water telegraph robust fine elements and responsiveness to the lighting. Some heavier noise crops up in darker sequences and skin tones can run a bit heavy, but those are likely inherent artistic decisions in what's ultimately a very solid, vivid presentation from WB.

Music tends to be the only consistent surround element throughout Lost River's 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio track, but that's not a bad thing. The subtle pulses and ambient touches backstage at the theater end up being the only noteworthy elements getting to the rear channels, while clanging fences, splashing water, and the rustle of trees typically only sees separation in the front channels. Dialogue ranges from satisfyingly responsive to different tenors to only moderately audible, even reaching a few moments of wonky balance that makes bits and pieces of verbal delivery a bit hard to discern, especially in the underground club. Aside from a few demolished walls and vigorous splashes of water, however, there isn't really a lot of strong activity to test the track, while other slight elements -- hands sloshing around in stage blood, footsteps through the outdoors or inside the club, the subtle hiss of a basement and the clang of metal in a duffle bag -- are merely so-so. It'll do. English and Spanish subs are available.


Special Features:

Nothin', except for a UV Digital Copy code.


Final Thoughts:

Ryan Gosling's directorial debut, Lost River, feels more like he's standing in for Nicholas Winding Refn and emulating David Lynch in the process than carving out his own cinematic perspective. He concocts a plethora of diverse mesmerizing images that assemble into a form of surrealist visual poetry, rendering a partly-fanciful fable that brushes against the topic of destitution in the neglected corners of America for thematic effect. However, its diluted plot and unpersuasive characters never really get it anywhere beyond being a sumptuous curio, while Gosling's artistic touches mostly come across as a collage of repurposed ideas instead of fresh takes on his inspirations. Gosling has potential in the director's chair, but this simply feels like someone else's "different" instead of his own. Rent It.



Thomas Spurlin, Staff Reviewer -- DVDTalk Reviews | Personal Blog/Site
Buy from Amazon.com

C O N T E N T

V I D E O

A U D I O

E X T R A S

R E P L A Y

A D V I C E
Rent It

E - M A I L
this review to a friend
Popular Reviews

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links