Mud (2013)

mud movie posterBack in 1996, adaptations from John Grisham novels were the big thing. Tom Cruise starred in The Firm. Denzel Washington and Julia Roberts starred in The Pelican Brief. Susan Sarandon and Tommy Lee Jones starred in The Client. All were critically acclaimed and performed exceptionally well at the box office. A Time To Kill was Grisham’s first novel and the next the fourth to be adapted for film. Arguably, it is Grisham’s best novel, and the buzz surrounding the film was tremendous. A host of Hollywood A-listers wanted the lead role of Jack Brigance. The question was who would get the lead in the movie that also starred Sandra Bullock, Ashley Judd, Samuel L. Jackson, and Kevin Spacey. There was a lot of head-shaking when the lead part went to a little-known actor named Matthew McConaughey (Frailty, Amistad). McConaughey nailed the role, and the movie was critically acclaimed and earned over $100 million domestically. The film put McConaughey on the map, and many considered the part of Jack Brigance the role he was born to play.

I could see that. I probably even agreed with that. That is until I saw Jeff Nichols’s (Take Shelter, Shotgun Stories) instant classic MudMud is storytelling at its best. This movie is very deserving of its 98% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It’s that good. I found only one fault with the story and was willing to overlook it because the rest was done so well. Before I get into the plot, I’d like to reference McConaughey again briefly. He’s a hit-or-miss actor. Lots of people love him. However, lots of people could care less about him. Most think he takes his shirt off too much in his movies. Women think he’s hot. Men are often jealous of him. He can be an excellent actor, but he has been in many movies he should never have been in. He’s similar to Brendan Fraser in that both of these men are great Drama actors, but both seem like they should be doing more comedies. McConaughey can be funny, but romantic comedy after romantic comedy is a waste of his talent. I wished he had passed on movies like Failure to Launch, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, and The Wedding Planner. However, from 2011 on, McConaughey has redefined himself as an actor and is getting praise. This started with The Lincoln Lawyer in 2011 and continued in 2012 with Magic Mike and Killer Joe. I have yet to see Magic Mike (though I will). I did see Killer Joe, and I did not like it. McConaughey was great, but the movie was disturbing, unrealistic, and just not my cup of tea. Mud was the performance I had been waiting for since seeing A Time to Kill in the theater back in 1996.
Mud’s director Jeff Nichols is now three for three as a director. If you have yet to see either Shotgun Stories or Take Shelter, I encourage you to see both. Take Shelter was especially traffic and put Michael Shannon (Revolutionary Road, HBO’s Boardwalk Empire) on the map. Shannon has had a role in all three of Nichols’s movies. Nicholas is a masterful storyteller. Unfortunately, storytelling is a lost art in many films these days. As a result, there is too often a missed opportunity to show the genuine development of various characters who play an integral part in telling the complete story. Nicholas did so much in his 2 hours and 10 minutes. It never felt long or drawn out, even though it took a long time for the main storyline to develop.

It’s a coming-of-age story centered around Ellis (Up and comer Tye Sheridan – The Tree of Life, Joe), a young teenage boy who effortlessly discovers the beauty and the ugliness of the world around him. Over two hours, we watch as Ellis falls in love, has his efforts towards love slapped in his face, meets a man who at first terrifies him but soon becomes his best friend, and sees everything he thought real from his childhood torn up in front of him. Ellis wears the emotions on his sleeve. We feel so close to this character that we want to be a shoulder for him to cry on when he is sad and be his biggest supporter when in his life is going well.

While Ellis is fantastic, he’s matched scene for scene by McConaughey’s Mud. Mud is a drifter. He has a past to him that is slowly pieced together as the movie develops. Who is this dirty man living on this boat suspended up in a tree on an uninhabited island visited only by Ellis and his best friend Neckbone (Jacob Lofland)? Is Mud a good guy or a bad guy? Is he neither? Is he both? McConaughey plays his role with the precision of a surgeon, careful not to give too much away. There are reasons behind each of his past decisions and each of his future ones. Has his life gone exactly as planned? Certainly not. But has anybody’s life gone exactly as planned? So what is Mud’s character flaw? For a man who is so calculated, what is the one thing that riles him up? Does he only care about himself, or does he care so much more for those around him?

The story’s setting is the banks of the Mississippi River. The scenery and backdrop are breathtaking and worth the price of admission alone. The storytelling is good as it gets, and you’ll be hard-pressed to find better acting in any movie this year. I encourage everybody to go out and see this movie.

Plot 10/10
Character Development 9/10
Character Chemistry 10/10
Acting 9.5/10 (would have been a 10…Witherspoon disappointed some)
Screenplay 9.5/10
Directing  9.5/10
Cinematography 10/10 (stunning)
Sound 9/10
Hook and Reel 9.5/10
Universal Relevance 9/10
95%

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