Two Lovers and a Bear is a 2016 Canadian independent drama film, directed by Kim Nguyen. The film stars Tatiana Maslany and Dane DeHaan. It was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. The film was scheduled to be released on October 7, 2016, by Entertainment One.
Video Two Lovers and a Bear
Plot
The film follows the lives of Roman and Lucy, two people living difficult lives in a small, frozen town of Apex, Nunavut, Canada. They are in love, but Lucy tells Roman that she must leave as a stalker has followed her. Roman tells her that he cannot leave and go south again, because of dark things in his own past. He tries to get her to go without him, and is even pushed to the brink of suicide. Eventually, he knows that he must go with her.
Roman can talk to bears which only he, it seems, can hear talking back, and a polar bear who talks to him about life makes several appearances in the story. On their snowmobile journey south, they are warned of a blizzard, but seek shelter in an abandoned military base instead of going back. Lucy comes to believe that her stalker has followed them there. It is then revealed that the stalker is in her mind, her dead abusive father. Roman burns the military base in order to prove that her father is now dead forever and can no longer follow her.
Seeking shelter in a snow cave, Roman and Lucy talk about a herd of caribou that they had found frozen in a lake earlier in their journey. They compare their lives to these animals, being led on a path and unable to get off, with all of them drowning. As the lovers begin to succumb to the intense temperature, the bear appears again, revealing that he is God and promising to Roman that he and Lucy will see each other again. The final scene shows the lovers' now dead, frozen bodies being cut out of the snow and lifted away by a helicopter.
Maps Two Lovers and a Bear
Cast
- Dane DeHaan as Roman
- Tatiana Maslany as Lucy
- Gordon Pinsent as Bear (voice)
- John Ralston as Lucy's Father
- Kakki Peter as John Tovok
Development
The film was first announced on March 18, 2015. TF1 International have acquired the worldwide distribution rights.
Filming
Filming began on March 17, 2015. Images were released from the set on May 25, 2015. The film's budget is $8.2 million. The filmmakers asked Iqaluit City Council to turn off street lights whilst they were filming because they did not want the orange hue that they gave off, instead wanting their own brighter, whiter lights. This involved manually disconnecting each lampost. Scenes with the bear were filmed in Porcupine, Ontario (northern Ontario near Timmins).
Release
The film had its world premiere at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival on May 18, 2016. The film went onto screen at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2016. Shortly after, 20th Century Fox and Netflix acquired U.S distribution rights to the film, making it the first Canadian film to be released in the United States by a major film studio since Splice. The film is scheduled to be released in Canada on October 7, 2016. Executive producer Jeff Sackman told Playback Daily that Fox is targeting a Valentine's Day 2017 release, though he offered no further details on when the film would be made available on Netflix. The U.S release date was changed to December 16, 2016 in order to qualify for the Oscars.
Reception
Critical response
The film received critical acclaim. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 86% based on 22 reviews.
American Critics
Sheri Linden in the Los Angeles Times calls the film "thrillingly cinematic", however, notes that not all of the plot lines work equally, and the conversations between Roman and Lucy may be more important than the plot lines.
Christy Lemire from RogerEbert.com said the film was "Beautiful and thoroughly unpredictable; you never know where Nguyen is going with this story, including the chilling, sci-fi/horror direction he heads in toward the film's climax."
Glenn Kenny of The New York Times was quoted as saying the film has "Beauty", but noted that it had an "overheated romanticism".
Canadian critics
Liz Braun of the Toronto Sun said "There's a surreal quality to Two Lovers and a Bear that gets underlined by the appearance of the Ursus maritimus of the title; DeHaan has called the movie an adult fairy tale, and that's an apt description."
Simon Houpt from Globe and Mail wrote "Viewers have two choices: Give yourself over to the experience, and you'll be transported; stand back, and you'll feel nothing but chill."
Accolades
References
External links
- Two Lovers and a Bear on IMDb
Source of the article : Wikipedia