The Missing Movie Review
The Missing Review

"The Missing" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Ron HowardProducer : Brian Grazer,Daniel Ostroff
Screenwiter : Ken Kaufman
Starring : Tommy Lee Jones,Cate Blanchett,Evan Rachel Wood,Jenna Boyd,Aaron Eckhart
Is there a role Cate Blanchett cannot convincingly play? As the tent pole of
Ron Howard’s drawn-out period thriller The Missing, the Oscar nominee assumes
the physical, spiritual, and emotional confidence of a pioneer woman who must
simultaneously play caretaker, healer, and rough-rider. We don’t laugh when
Maggie bakes in one scene and brandishes a shotgun in the next. That’s life on
the frontier, and Blanchett – a proper Aussie – looks like she could hop in
that saddle and ride with the best of them.
If only Howard and screenwriter Ken Kaufman could pony up a story worthy of
Cate’s efforts. Working from Thomas Eidson’s novel, Kaufman has penned an
abduction case that plays out along a surprisingly linear course. Any time he
attempts to branch out in a valuable subplot – whether exploring the
ineffective nature of authority in the Wild West, or staging one of many
dramatic escape sequences – he does so without confidence. Missing occasionally
teases us with relevant character and plot development, then rapidly turns tail
and scurries back to the central pursuit story, a slender narrative that can’t
hold our interest for the film’s elongated 147-minute run time.
The person doing the pursuing is Maggie Gilkeson (Blanchett), a single mom
tending to her New Mexico property with daughters Lily (Evan Rachel Wood) and
Dot (Jenna Boyd) in 1885. One day while shepherding the cattle, the girls are
attacked and Lily is kidnapped by Apache warriors who collect women for the
purpose of sale in Mexico. With nowhere else to turn, Maggie must recruit her
apologetic father Samuel (Tommy Lee Jones), a wanderer with a sullied past
looking to reconcile with his daughter after years of neglect.
The Missing is challenging filmmaking that doesn’t challenge the viewer. The
result is Howard’s least interesting movie in years. The film eliminates the
gray areas that normally hide human drama, creating clear cut heroes and
villains. Once the lines in the sand are drawn, the picture plays through
without suspense.
Howard does pad the journey with obstacles, from Maggie’s sudden illness at the
hands of an Indian curse to Samuel’s failed attempt to purchase Lily and the
subsequent beating he receives for his efforts. These scenes slowly delay the
inevitable and reek of filler. Even a dramatic flood rescue feels like a jolt
intended to shake audience members out of their slumber.
Howard and Kaufman suggest a desire to explore their historical surroundings
but don’t use their time wisely. Subplots are broached then disregarded. There’
s mention that the Apache were U.S. soldiers who flipped allegiances, but
nothing comes of this revelation. The examples of authority Maggie encounters
provide cameos but no assistance. Look for Clint Howard as a spineless town
sheriff and Val Kilmer as a marauding U.S. general leading restless troops.
We can see pieces of Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven and John Ford’s The Searchers
on screen in The Missing. Howard’s camera seems to stretch its circular eye as
wide as possible in an effort to capture New Mexico’s breathtaking natural
landscapes. He backdrops his human drama with miraculous natural vistas that
never dwarf the actors. There’s even more than enough of Andrew Davis’ The
Fugitive, and not just because Jones plays a tracker named Samuel in each.
What’s missing from The Missing is Howard’s heart and human touch in the face
of tragedy. Missing will most be remembered for the window it gives into Howard’
s dark side. The aftermath of the abduction is brutal. The savagery of the
Apache toward their female captives is primal and masochistic. Lily is
force-fed dirt. A captor is trampled by a stampeding horse. It’s a bleak, adult
approach to the material we might not expect from Howard, who is maturing as a
filmmaker but still has room for growth.
Now don't go missing on us.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





