REBUILDING (2025)

November 14, 2025

Greetings again from the darkness. We don’t see the fire. There is no need. We see the aftermath right along with Dusty as he takes a deep breath and surveys what’s left of his multi-generational ranch. We are also there as he auctions the cattle that he can no longer tend to. Without the assistance of any significant early dialogue, writer-director Max Walker-Silverman (A LOVE SONG, 2022) ensures we understand the man that Dusty is.

We can’t help but feel the pain when we see another person suffering, yet when they are dealing with total devastation and the loss of everything they own, we are simply at a loss as to how to react or help. Josh O’Connor has turned into one of the finest actors working today, as evidenced by his roles in “The Crown”, EMMA (2020), and CHALLENGERS (2024). In what may be his finest work yet, he perfectly captures Dusty, a quiet, proud man soul-searching for a way forward.

Dusty’s ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy, “The White Lotus”) looks for a way to help him re-connect with their young daughter Callie Rose (Lily LaTorre, RUN RABBIT RUN, 2023), while Callie Rose’s grandmother Bess (Amy Madigan) understands the proud man’s pain and offers strength and support while she can. Watching Dusty and Callie Rose together is quite moving, and we find ourselves mentally urging things to work out.

Finally allowing himself to accept some assistance, Dusty moves into a FEMA trailer and takes a temporary job on a highway crew holding a traffic sign. He mostly ignores the neighbors … a small community of those who have also lost everything … until one of these neighbors, Mila (Kali Reis, CATCH THE FAIR ONE, 2021) manages to draw Dusty into the group. It turns out misery really does love company, and these neighbors offer support to each other while bonding over a devastation that we all hope to never experience.

Wi-fi at the local library, a blue barn, a job in Montana, a family death, a fizzled bank loan, and the high-severity burn that means no crops for up to 10 years make up the harsh reality of Dusty’s situation. Walker-Silverman includes a few memorable lines of dialogue (this is not a big talky movie), ensuring that we viewers are deep in thought. Beginning again is terribly difficult, and these folks merely try to find moments of joy amidst the sadness. What they never lose sight of his hope … and hope sometimes appears in something as simple as a sprig of growth. The film’s subdued approach acts to make it all the more impactful.

In select theaters November 14 and opening wide November 21, 2025.

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CATCH THE FAIR ONE (2022)

February 10, 2022

Greetings again from the darkness. One tragic event can certainly derail a person’s life. It’s happened in plenty of other movies, often resulting in an engaging story of redemption. There is also nothing new about a friend or family member out to save a loved one who is in peril. Director Josef Kubata Wladyka co-wrote this script with the film’s star, Kali Reis, and though it covers some familiar territory from those two premises, it’s done so in a way that feels fresh and different and important.

Ms. Reis is an accomplished boxer, having held the title in two weight classes. Her heritage is part Native and part Cape Verdean, and she brings a personal perspective into the story of her character. Kaylee Uppeshau (Ms. Reis) slogs through days waiting tables at a greasy spoon, and sleeps at night in a women’s shelter, with a razor blade tucked in her cheek for protection. She was previously known in the ring as “KO”, but for the past two years her goal in life is to track down her younger sister Weeta (Mainaku Borrerro), who was abducted while walking home from Kaylee’s gym. The girls’ mother (played by Kimberly Guerrero, whom “Seinfeld” fans will remember as Winona) has moved on by running group therapy sessions for others who are grieving. She also makes it clear that Weeta was the favored daughter.

Kaylee gets a lead on her sister, and soon finds herself drawn into the world of sex-trafficking. It’s a dangerous situation as she goes up against local scumbags Bobby (Daniel Henshell) and his father Willie (Kevin Dunn), the white men who have a market for native girls. But Kaylee is not the typical victim. She has an intensity to match her body tattoos and multiple piercings (cheeks, nose, tongue, ears, naval), and the physical training to hold her own.

It’s her acting debut, and Ms. Reis excels as Kaylee in this thriller. She creates an engrossing character who is tough, yet relatable. Ms. Reis is intense, naturalistic, and believable. It’s quite a first-time performance, and she keeps us engaged all the way through. We are never really sure if Kaylee is after justice or closure, or whether she truly holds out hope that Weeta is still alive. The subject of Indigenous women and girls being abducted is also the focus of Martin Scorsese’s upcoming film KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON, based on the superb book by David Grann. Whereas that film will look at history, filmmaker Wladyka and Reis make it personal and deliver a literal and figurative gut-punch.

In theaters and VOD beginning February 11, 2022

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