Straw Dogs Review
By Rich Cline
Hollywood screenwriter David (Marsden) moves to the backwater Mississippi home of his actress wife Amy (Bosworth), who is immediately sucked back into local life. This includes her former flame Charlie (Skarsgard), who is now a contractor working on David and Amy's barn with his chucklehead hunting buddies (Coiro, Powell and Lush). But soon, the tension between Charlie and Amy erupts into sexual violence, as David is taunted about his manhood. And a simple-minded guy (Purcell) turns out to be the catalyst for an eruption of violence.
Writer-director Lurie gives the film a jolt of intelligence that transcends its rather cliched setting. These aren't ordinary rednecks: they're straw dogs, young men whose lives suddenly became meaningless after they stopped being local heroes on the high school football team. So life is about bravado, bar brawls and staying at the top of the pecking order. While Coiro, Powell and Lush are extremely believable in these roles, Skarsgard is far too beautiful and charismatic to be such a dolt. Which actually makes his character darkly intriguing, especially since the performance is so perfectly gauged.
Meanwhile, Marsden and Bosworth are terrific as the happy couple whose life is first shaken and then threatened with total oblivion. Their animalistic reaction is the central theme of the story, and also the most distasteful element in a film that's packed with cruelty, bigotry, murder and rape. That David isn't actually a man until he has killed everyone trying to attack his family is an extremely vile concept.
But then, this is a film about the worst side of humanity, including this cultural definition of masculinity. Scenes are packed with big issues - class and privilege, honesty and politeness, hunting and being hunted, law-abiding and rule-bending - as Lurie digs into the fragile balance of life in small-town America. It's not a pretty picture. And the film is increasingly hard to watch as events turn so violent that thinking of this as exaggerated fiction is the only way to cope with it.

Facts and Figures
Year: 2011
Run time: 113 mins
In Theaters: Wednesday 29th December 1971
Distributed by: Sony Pictures/Screen Gems
Production compaines: ABC Pictures
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 91%
Fresh: 30 Rotten: 3
IMDB: 7.6 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Rod Lurie
Producer: Rod Lurie
Screenwriter: Marc Frydman, Rod Lurie
Starring: Dustin Hoffman as David Sumner, Susan George as Amy Sumner, Peter Vaughan as Tom Hedden, T. P. McKenna as Major John Scott, Del Henney as Charlie Venner, Jim Norton as Chris Cawsey, Donald Webster as Riddaway, Ken Hutchison as Norman Scutt, Len Jones as Bobby Hedden, Sally Thomsett as Janice Hedden, Robert Keegan as Harry Ware, Peter Arne as John Niles, Cherina Schaer as Louise Hood, Colin Welland as Reverend Barney Hood, David Warner as Henry Niles
Also starring: James Marsden, Kate Bosworth, Alexander Skarsgard, James Woods, Rhys Coiro, Drew Powell, Billy Lush, Dominic Purcell, Rod Lurie, Marc Frydman