Review of Cold Mountain

Cold Mountain (2003)
A Flawed but Interesting Civil-War Epic
1 March 2004
Warning: Spoilers
(Moderate Spoilers)

I enjoyed this film, and am surprised at the amount of criticism and

anger lavished upon it. True, it is flawed, and for most of the

reasons that people have cited; Nicole Kidman looks out of

place--tall and beautiful, with great skin and teeth;. There is an

absence of black characters, when at this time, 1/3 of the

population of North Carolina was black; The film was made in

Romania, when it took place in the states.

I personally don't mind it that the characters are all too "pretty" to be

in this film. The way people look has much to do with the reason

they become stars. The absence of black characters may be a

more valid criticism, as there were many in the book. But this

does not take away from the story. And, although I feel for the

people who protested this movie because it meant losing

entertainment jobs for Americans, Romania served as a great

location to film this movie, as it had many spots untouched by

industry, could convincingly depict the four seasons of the year in

the short period that they had to film, and of course, it brought the

budget down.

"Cold Mountain" is a brutal and disturbing odyssey, much more so

than Anthony Minghella's other epic, "The English Patient." In it, we

witness graphic animal slaughter, cruelty toward Southern

deserters, (including a pair of sons murdered in front of their

mother while she is being tortured), and other violent encounters.

At times, it is as unpredictable as it is formulaic, as we are

surprised by characters who are suddenly killed off, or who

unexpectedly come back to us.

I can't understand why people find it unbelievable that Jude Law

and Nicole Kidman would have a connection from only a few

moments together. War rushes things, and relationships like this

have been common (I don't know as much about the Civil War, but

during WWII, many couples divorced after the man returned home,

as they hastily got married before they went overseas.) Even

without war, people have devoted themselves to others whom they

hardly knew, off of brief connections they felt with each-other. I

also do not agree with those who complain that Law and Kidman

spend the entire movie apart, when we are paying to see them

together. The two leads have quite a few scenes together.

As Law deserts and travels back to Nicole Kidman, he experiences many different encounters with interesting characters,

including a woman who slaughters her loyal goat in front of us,

people who routinely try to turn him over to the Confederacy, and a

very powerful sequence with a war-widow (I never knew Natalie

Portman could act!). These encounters are unfortunately uneven

when compared to each other, but they all work in their own right,

and always keep us interested. Nicole Kidman's life back at home

is equally important, as is her relationship with Oscar-winner,

Renee Zellweger (and I do pity that poor rooster!) A posse of men

stays in the town to hunt and kill deserters, providing many

suspenseful and frightening moments; these characters are

outrageously evil and murderous. My biggest complaint about the

film is how their story unsatisfyingly ends with a quick shootout.

Now while I found the film to be one of the more creative,

interesting, and entertaining movies of the year, I found it achieved

far less than the greatness that the filmmakers probably tried to

produce. The script needed more work. I haven't read the book,

and I suppose it was difficult to adapt. Something overall is

missing from "Cold Mountain." It has random glimpses of great

poignancy and emotional impact, but seems to give up tying them

together to better define the movie.

Grade: B+
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