Common Sense Media Review
By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?
Expertly crafted Western drama has violence, cruelty.
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The Power of the Dog
Parent and Kid Reviews
Based on 3 parent reviews
What's the Story?
Writer-director Jane Campion's THE POWER OF THE DOG, based on Thomas Savage's 1967 novel, follows the story of two wildly different middle-aged brothers running their family's prosperous ranch in 1920s Montana. Phil (Benedict Cumberbatch) is a charismatic cowboy who manages the ranch hands and has a razor-sharp whit and cruel nature. Little brother George (Jessie Plemons) is kind and more refined but also bland and lonely. They still sleep in the room they shared as boys -- until they take a trip to another Montana town, where they meet Rose (Kirsten Dunst), a beautiful young widow and small boardinghouse owner whose teen son, Peter (Kodi Smit-McPhee), is a sensitive social outcast. Phil maliciously bullies Peter, and the situation gets worse when George unexpectedly marries Rose and brings her home to the family ranch. Phil humiliates and ridicules Rose and refers to Peter as "Miss Nancy." Once Peter joins them at the ranch during a boarding school break, the dynamic shifts to another gear in psychological terror and manipulation.
Is It Any Good?
Campion's masterfully crafted and acted historical drama explores both the myth of the American dream and toxic masculinity and elevates the work of a Western author who deserves posthumous praise. After taking a feature film directing break since 2009's Bright Star, the Oscar-winning director (the first woman director to receive the Palme d'Or) returns with a literary tale that exposes hard truths about loneliness, isolation, and repression. With her gifted cast and crew, Campion immerses audiences in the American West of the 1920s and provides a fascinating character study of four individuals as solitary and unknowable as the Big Sky landscape. Cumberbatch initially seems miscast as a macho cowboy, but as the movie progresses, Phil's layers make it clear why the actor was chosen for the role. Cumberbatch ultimately gives one the best performances of his career as Phil, a man so chilling and brutally savage that scenes with him take on a tense sense of psychological horror. Dunst is fabulous as grieving and self-medicating Rose, and her on- and off-screen partner, Plemons, provides a caring foil to his brother's ruthlessness.
As easy as it would be to focus on Cumberbatch, kudos are also owed to 25-year-old Aussie actor Smit-McPhee, who's excellent as even-smarter-than-he-seems Peter. The strength of the acting ensemble is bolstered by the outstanding technical crew. Australian cinematographer Ari Wegner captures the gorgeous mountain landscape (even though the film was shot in New Zealand, not Montana), and composer Jonny Greenwood's score ratchets up the story's tension and emotional suspense. The costumes are also worth mentioning, with Kirsty Cameron paying lots of detail to class (noticeable as Rose goes from working widow to well-heeled wife) and textiles in a way that makes the large fur coats, shiny belt buckles, well-worn denim, and beaded Indigenous gloves part of the story. If Campion's adaptation loosely reminds viewers of the themes of Brokeback Mountain, it should be noted that Brokeback's author, Annie Proulx, was influenced by Thomas Savage's work. The movie's writing and pacing, like the scenery, are slow and languorous, but the build-up makes the final act all the more riveting.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about substance use and violence in The Power of the Dog. How are those issues necessary to the story?
How does the movie address sexuality? In what ways does sexual repression manifest itself in both brothers? What motivates each brother's choices throughout the film?
Discuss the story's theme of masculinity in the 1920s. How is that theme still relevant today? What role does historical context play in the portrayal of homophobia? Why does Phil ridicule Peter?
Which characters display empathy? How about curiosity and perseverance? Why are those important character strengths?
Does watching the movie make you want to read the book? For those familiar with Brokeback Mountain, talk about the thematic similarities to that adaptation.
Movie Details
- In theaters: November 17, 2021
- On DVD or streaming: November 8, 2022
- Cast: Benedict Cumberbatch , Kirsten Dunst , Jesse Plemons
- Director: Jane Campion
- Inclusion Information: Female actors
- Studio: Netflix
- Genre: Western
- Topics: Book Characters , Brothers and Sisters , Horses and Farm Animals
- Character Strengths: Curiosity , Empathy , Perseverance
- Run time: 125 minutes
- MPAA rating: R
- MPAA explanation: brief sexual content/full nudity
- Awards: Academy Award , Golden Globe - Golden Globe Award Winner
- Last updated: June 20, 2024
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