Winter's Bone
It’s easy to see
How Jennifer Lawrence went
To Katniss from Ree.
Let me start by saying one thing that I have to get out of my head, and I will only say it once: Winter’s Boner. Someone had to say it, and now that that’s out of the way, we can proceed.
My relationship with “Winter’s Bone” dates back to many Black Fridays ago, when I purchased the Blu-ray (remember those?) for something like $3.99 at one of my Black Friday staples (not Staples), Wal-Mart or Best Buy. But Wal-Mart is typically only the go-to for DVDs (remember those?), so it must have been Best Buy. After buying Winter’s Bone and returning home from our annual Thanksgiving-in-St. Louis trip, I placed the movie on the shelf in my room, where it’s sat untouched and collecting dust ever since. Every so often I see it and think, I should watch Winter’s Bone, but I never do. Fast forward to January, when I was concepting at work for a client based in the Ozarks. After doing minimal research (read: Wikipedia), I discovered that the author of Winter’s Bone, the novel, was from the same small town as our client. What! I didn’t even know Winter’s Bone, the movie, was based on a book. Obviously I had to read it, and thanks to modern technology, I blew through it within the week (shout out Libby. Check it out if you haven’t heard of it.) A few weeks later, I finally found the time to watch the movie, and the rest, they say, is history.
Scene-for-scene, Winter’s Bone the movie is a very faithful adaptation of the novel, and every bit as tense and gritty. Anyone who’s seen the movie (since I’m almost a decade late, there should be plenty of you) or read the book knows that there were a handful of scenes, including the ending, that I was absolutely dreading to watch unfold. The book was descriptive enough, thank you, but they turned out to not be as bad as I expected. With the exception of the skinning of one very unfortunate squirrel. I definitely looked away at that part.
The book was fresh enough in my mind that I could play spot the differences as I watched, but really the only notable change for me was Ree going from having two little brothers in the book to a brother and sister in the movie. The former makes a bit more sense because of [redacted for spoiler purposes but really mostly laziness], but I’m sure whoever’s in charge of making that call had their reasons. If it’s the casting people, I’ll give them a break because holy shit, the casting for this movie was perfect. Every single character looks, sounds and acts exactly as I imagined them to in the book, to the point where for a second I thought maybe I had seen the movie before. But as my lengthy description of how the movie sat unopened on my shelf for years, I can assure you I hadn’t. Plus, bravo to the casting peeps for making Jennifer Lawrence a star. She went from playing a throwaway character in Monk (remember that?) to an Academy Award-nominated actress in this low-budget indie movie seemingly overnight, and now she’s one of the biggest stars in the world. Hollywood’s cool like that.
The moral of the review is, don’t wait as long as me to check out Winter’s Bone, or any of the other movies on your shelf that you’ve been putting off for years. Just do it! You’ll be glad you did.