
NOTE: This is a reprint of my earlier review from the Sundance Film Festival.
David Lowery has been around a long time, but chances are
you've never heard of him. A multi-hyphenate who has done practically
everything in the filmmaking business, his previous features, including 2009's
Texas-set
St. Nick, came and went without registering much of a blip,
and deservedly so. But with his white-hot, layered outlaw romance
Ain't Them
Bodies Saints, Lowery stakes his claim as a director just now hitting his
stride creatively.

With a dark, storybook mood set firmly in the mode of Terrence Malick's
Badlands,
or perhaps even Andrew Dominik's
The Assassination of Jesse James,
Lowery flips the Bonnie & Clyde paradigm on its ear. Rooney Mara, venturing
as far away from Lisbeth Salander as imaginable, plays Ruth Guthrie, a Texas
woman with a deep Southern twang and a deep love for Bob Muldoon(Casey
Affleck). From the very first, elegantly framed scene, Lowery establishes their
bond as the two are embroiled in a passionate argument, which comes to an
abrupt end once Bob learns she's pregnant. The two make up an outlaw pair, and
after a robbery they find themselves in a bloody shoot out with the cops,
leading to the death of a member of their gang. Also shot in the melee is cop
Patrick Wheeler(Ben Foster), and when all the dust has settled, Ruth and Bob
are taken in with him taking the fall.

With Ruth set free mostly due to her pregnancy, four years pass with Bob
writing her a letter from prison every single day. Sentenced to 25 years, he
vows to one day return to her and their daughter, attempting escape five times
before finally succeeding on the sixth. In the meanwhile, Patrick has begun
sniffing around Ruth, feeling an empathic closeness to the woman many perceive
as being duped into a life of crime. But Ruth is no saint. She's first and
foremost a survivor, recognizing that the same forces that drew her to Bob all
those years ago are the same ones that must keep him away from her and their
daughter.

Daniel Hart's rousing fiddle and handclap-laden score signals a coming
reckoning, as Bob seeks to reclaim the family he already lost once. While
violence is mostly kept to a minimum, when it happens it's quick and brutal,
captured in dusty and dimly-lit landscapes that harken back to the old West.
While Lowery keeps the narrative straight-forward and linear, the scope of his
vision is grand and lyrical, bringing a timeless quality. Bob's narrow focus
gets a bit more complicated with the interference of Skerritt(Keith Carradine),
Ruth's friend and guardian who has helped her build a life over the years. As
Bob's circuitous route leads closer to Texas, Skerritt goes to dangerous
lengths to keep him away, while at the same time Patrick and Ruth have become
even closer.

It's not a stretch to say that both Mara and Affleck give career best
performances here. While we only see them together for a few minutes, their
romantic moments are memorable and heartfelt, carrying through as the film's
true driving force. But it may be Ben Foster who is the real scene stealer,
proving once and for all he can be a leading man who smolders as much as any
other. Always a screen chameleon of sorts, his turn as the gentle and curious
Patrick is especially impressive when compared to his other Sundance
performance as famed beatnik William Burroughs in
Kill Your Darlings.

At only about 90 minutes in length, Lowery packs a lot of story without ever
taking a harried approach. In fact, there are times when perhaps he's a bit too
casual, especially when stepping away from Bob's quest or Ruth's struggles. For
all the slow dread Lowery teases us with, we never quite get the bloodthirsty
showdown we were all expecting. While anticlimactic only in that regard, Lowery
more than makes up for it with an intense and emotionally draining climax that
feels natural to this particular story and these characters. It will be
interesting to see how it gets marketed, but they may want to start by
proclaiming
Ain't Them Bodies Saints one of the most impressive films to
emerge out of Sundance. With its cast and director all but poised for
greatness, we may be talking about it for a very long time.