Become a Member
Life

Film review: The Power of The Dog

This multilayered adaptation is stunning from start to finish

November 19, 2021 19:03
cow.JPG
1 min read

Known for her stripped-down storytelling style and striking visual composition, director Jane Campion became the second woman in Hollywood history to be nominated for a Best Director Oscar for her 1993 film The Piano. Campion’s latest, The Power of The Dog, marks a return to the big screen for the filmmaker who more recently dabbled in TV, notably with the mesmerising BBC drama Top of The Lake.

Based on the 1967 novel of the same  name by Thomas Savage, The Power Of The Dog stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst. The film also features a stunning turn from Kodi Smit-McPhee (The Road, Let Me In) and a haunting score courtesy of award-winning composer and member of the band Radiohead, Johnny Greenwood.

Phil Burbank (Cumberbatch) and his brother George (Plemons) are the sons of wealthy Montana farmers living on a ranch in the early 1920s. While mild-mannered George has dreams of entering public life, his brother Phil prides himself on his rough, ready and unpleasant nature.

When his brother brings home Rose (Dunst at her brilliant best), a recently widowed cafe owner, and introduces her as his new wife, a disapproving Phil proceeds to turn her life and that of her teenage son Peter (Smit- McPhee) into a living hell.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.