Movie Review: “The World Made Straight”

straight1The best indie cinema is regional in nature, films with a strong sense of place. And the further that place is from the over-filmed Southern
California or New York, the better. The rural setting of a “Winter’s Bone,” “Ulee’s Gold” or “Beasts of the Southern Wild” becomes the main
character, shaping the people and events whose stories the film sets out to tell.
“The World Made Straight” is a flawed but vivid Southern Gothic melodrama set in an isolated community in the mountains of North Carolina.
And whatever shortcomings this over-boiled adaptation of a Ron Rash novel serves up, its setting overcomes them — making seemingly miscast
players pay off and overwrought, theatrical characters feel right at home.
“Bloody Madison County” came by its nickname honestly. The lingering bitterness of a Civil War massacre hangs over the hills and
hollers like the smokey blue rain and fog in Tim Orr’s cinematography. The trouble is, the kids, especially Travis Shelton (Jeremy Irvine), don’t
know that history.
Travis is a 17 year-old drop-out who’d rather fish than work at an honest job. When he stumbles across a pot patch and steals a few plants, his
pal (Haley Joel Osment) puts him in touch with Leonard, an ex-teacher and burnout played with marvelous conviction by Noah Wyle.
Leonard grew up here, but he never fit in. He may sell pot, keep dogs and tote a rifle, but his trailer is neat, filled with artifacts from the Civil War,
and books. Aaron Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” plays on the stereo.
“Never heard of’em.”
“Used to open for Skynyrd,” Leonard cracks.
Leonard opens Travis Shelton’s eyes to family history, his people and the bloody past that gave Madison County its reputation. Leonard has the
journals of his own ancestor, a Civil War era doctor. He is the very guy to teach Travis about the Shelton Laurel Massacre, about the circular, self-
sustaining nature of mountain violence, about how “time don’t pass. It’s all just layers.”
Country singer Steve Earle shows up as a murderous but musically-minded pot grower and thug and Minka Kelly is the drug-addict beauty traded among the growers and dealers.

straight2
“World Made Straight” has the makings for a lean and mean revenge thriller. But N.C. native David Burris takes his time, letting the production
design and David Gordon Green’s N.C.-educated cinematographer, Tim Orr, set the tone and the pace with lovely, distinct images of hazy
mountains, houses where paint is barely a memory and mud-spattered late-model cars and trucks tell the hard life story of each person driving
them.
So it’s a slow film, and almost painfully melodramatic in its obvious twists and turns.
But the performances are finely tuned, and the story arc and situations — aside from a few pauses for a song — quietly gripping.
Burris hasn’t created a film that’s on a par with “Shotgun Stories,” Scott Teem’s “That Evening Sun” or Green’s early films, “George Washington” or “Undertow.” But with this debut feature, he’s shown he’s another regional talent whose sense of his “World” warrants the attention of anyone bored to tears by yet another tale of the mean streets of New York or L.A.

2half-star6

MPAA Rating: R for language including sexual references, drug content and violence

Cast: Jeremy Irvine, Noah Wylie, Minka Kelley,  Steve Earle, Haley Joel Osment

Credits: Directed by  David Burris, script by Shane Danielson based on the Ron Rash book. A Millennium release.

Running time: 1:59

About Roger Moore

Movie Critic, formerly with McClatchy-Tribune News Service, Orlando Sentinel, published in Spin Magazine, The World and now published here, Orlando Magazine, Autoweek Magazine
This entry was posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news. Bookmark the permalink.