We saw Backcountry on Netflix, and it is an effective enough one-trick pony. Unlike The Ruins movie we reviewed earlier, there are no super-natural elements, the threat is just a plain ol' bear. I laughed and cried, and sometimes it wasn’t ironic!
Oh my God, @Dgoebel00 on INSTA provided this amazing pic. Check him out on his site as well.
https://youtu.be/46uwmzTf5nA
Backcountry Synopsis
Backcountry is the 2014 story of a woodsy kind of guy named Alex (Jeff Roop) and his urban girlfriend, Jenn (Missy Peregrym), who are heading into the woods for a late-season camping trip. It’s directed and written by Adam MacDonald.
Watch Backcountry Watch it on AmazonBackcountry Movie
Early in
the movie, we meet a Park Ranger (Nicholas Campbell) who warns the couple that they should probably
bring a map and look out for inclement weather, but Alex don’t need none of
that shit! He’s a man’s man who knows these woods like the back of his country,
and he don’t need no stinking map.
As the
couple heads into the woods they quickly end up with more camping trip than
they bargained for.
Backcountry Review
Backcountry is a one-trick
pony that relies on a surprisingly well-grounded theme - The woods are scary,
and so are wild animals.
Most of the
movie left me scratching my head and rewinding to try to make sense of dialog
or acting that didn’t seem to fit the situation. Why are they worried about a
single snapped tree? Why didn’t the movie make a point of that tree before it
was snapped to show the audience that this is certainly out of place?
Lots of
little details like this made the movie a little frustrating for me.
Overall, I
do appreciate the simplicity of this movie and its premise and the stakes. It
was fun to watch with a friend and plays on a very reliable fear, being alone
in the woods at night.
Score for Backcountry
6/10
Spoilers for Backcountry
Backcountry is a barebones kind of movie. Lots of it
is composed of vaguely wandering through the woods, with little to no dialog. There
are only four characters in the movie, our two protagonists, the park ranger at
the beginning, and Brad in the first third of the movie. Unless you count the
bear, I mean.
So beware, those are the stakes.
Check Out The Big Knife on Brad!
After they canoe across the lake and set up camp initially, we
meet Brad, a dreamy outdoorsman who starts to chat up Jenn while Alex is off
gathering wood. Alex is cagey upon meeting Brad, and this causes a rift in the new
relationship.
Stupid sexy Brad!
Brad shares his fish with the two before doling out his machismo
upon Alex. Brad reveals that he is an outdoor guide who is well-versed in the
area. He also reveals a huge skinning knife and his disdain for the snap judgment
that Alex made on him and his kindness.
Brad leaves our couple after dinner, a wink, and a slug of
whiskey, which left me extremely uneasy. Humans in the woods are, by far, the scariest
thing to me. People represent a very creepy and unreliable X-factor, in a place
that’s far away from law and order.
Brad is a great addition to the story because he sets up the
stakes, which feel alarmingly high for a hike in the woods.
The Path Less Traveled
As our couple gets on their way, there is a point where Alex
chooses the path less traveled. He seems sure of himself, so Jenn follows, and they
eventually set up camp. Every night we get to see them sleeping and hear the
creepy sounds of the woods. This is effective in all the right ways. Who knows
what’s out there?
The couple wakes up each day to a campsite that is a little
different than they left it.
As Alex recognizes the signs that they are almost to the
waterfall they set out to see, he quickens his pace. When they walk out into
the open, they both realize that they are not in the right place at all – they are
totally lost.
Until this point in the movie there has been a lot of filler