Months of Meryl: The River Wild (1994)
Thursday, May 24, 2018 at 8:39AM
John Guerin in Action, Carrie Fisher, Curtis Hanson, David Strathairn, John C Reilly, Joseph Mazello, Kevin Bacon, Months of Meryl, The River Wild

John and Matthew are watching every single live-action film starring Meryl Streep. 

 

 #21 —Gail Hartman, a rafting expert whose distracted husband and disgruntled son will soon turn out to be the least of her problems…

MATTHEWThe River Wild opens with the rather surprising sight of Meryl Streep rowing a kayak with steely determination and brisk athletic prowess down the lengthy expanse of the Charles River. Watching Curtis Hanson’s waterborne caper for the first time in 2018, I asked myself with stunned curiosity the same question that surely rolled through the minds of ‘90s audiences upon the film’s release: How exactly did she get here? The River Wild is a light rip-roarer that could have easily ended up as little more than a forgettable IMDB entry in the filmography of Sigourney Weaver or Geena Davis or Linda Hamilton were it not for someone’s out-of-the-box idea to transform one of our most famously worldly and erudite thespians into a hard-bodied, take-charge action heroine...

Streep’s participation here almost seems to willingly solicit the accusations of miscasting that have shadowed the actress throughout her entire career, sometimes fairly although oftentimes not. But her involvement also lends the film a level of prominence and critical consideration that a star more accustomed to blockbuster productions might not have necessarily provided. Streep indeed carries over an undeniable cachet to this unsubtle studio suspenser, but she also, much more importantly, supplies an interestingly atypical approach to the central role of Gail Hartman, a Boston-dwelling wife, mother, and teacher to the deaf who is also a recognized rafting specialist. This talent will prove especially handy when her son’s birthday trip down Idaho’s Salmon River is hijacked by a pair of dastardly bandits (Kevin Bacon and John C. Reilly), who intend to make their escape from a recent robbery by having Gail transport them through “the Gauntlet,” a series of treacherous rapids that have killed and paralyzed past rafters and are consequently forbidden to the public.

Is Streep miscast in The River Wild? Not exactly, although one of the aforementioned actresses — or, even better, Angela Bassett, an equally accomplished but far less likely alternative with impending ass-kicking, bodyguarding credentials — might have nailed the defining intensity of this genre archetype with a formidability that just doesn’t seem to interest Streep. But, then again, you don’t cast Meryl Streep to merely fill in a template, and what the actress ultimately brings to this particular movie are traits we rarely see applied to parts and projects of this variety. From moment to moment, Streep is a sprightly and perceptive presence perpetually open to spontaneity, nicely offsetting her character’s choppy, exposition-laden exchanges with loved ones and strangers alike. She colors outside the lines of the script, which was rewritten without credit by famous script doctor and noted Streep pal Carrie Fisher. Streep also dares to inject insouciant energy and emotional urgency into this already high-stakes river-run.

In its best moments, The River Wild comes alive, very briefly, as a portrait of an average middle-aged woman, saddled with a chirpy son (Joseph Mazzello) and a fuddy-duddy, work-addicted husband (David Strathairn), as she melancholically takes stock of the discouraging state of her life. Sure, the event that precipitate these revelations is a death-dealing river voyage instigated by a psycho-bandit who looks great with his shirt off, but Streep ably conveys this deeply personal reckoning all the same, often without the aid of dialogue. When Bacon’s Wade, who has brazenly flirted with Streep’s reciprocative Gail from his very first scene, teases her with the suggestion of an independent life and its possibilities for adventure, Streep communicates her character’s intense unsettlement with a subtly anxious shift of the eyes, averting Bacon’s own coolly penetrating stare. She's also conveying guilty curiosity of wondering what lies beyond her firm familial ties. The rest of the film rarely affords Streep equal moments for emotional truth and vulnerability, but there are still a few pleasures to be found along the way. Most of the film's best moments are a result of Streep’s introspective inclinations, which may not make her a most memorable action heroine, but at least make her a distinctive one. Then again, Streep works up a mighty mettle, not least of all when goading Bacon to do his worst, her voice and vision full of unveiled disdain, right at the juncture when Wade’s lewd fixation on Gail could easily turn violent. What stands out for you about Streep’s venture into troubled waters?

JOHN: Isn’t it odd how Streep’s presence alone makes you reassess your understanding of a fundamentally conventional film? You’re thinking not only about how Streep “fits” into the genre, what she brings to it, where it factors into her filmography, but also about what she saw in The River Wild. Why did she accept this blockbuster role? It’s precisely because we’re not watching a more unfettered presence like a Linda Hamilton, flex her biceps and paddle for her life, that The River Wild becomes a film about an “ordinary” mother and wife who summons immense strength and courage in increasingly arduous circumstances. Despite its contrivances, the film’s adventures and mishaps feel plausibly grounded in reality, its flashy set-pieces spun out from the story rather than spectacles amped up by a plot.

Of course, this sense of the real is almost entirely care of Streep’s performance, a compendium of thoughtful and exciting choices that, although unsurprising in the context of her career, play with the possibilities of the film’s amusement park-ride aesthetic. I wouldn’t say that Streep is miscast, but rather that her casting is the point: the film deliberately presents an action heroine as active in thought as she is in action. In a lovely New York Times profile, Streep noted, “Here was a woman in a sort of non-victim heroic part, a mother, someone I could relate to, who was really closer to me maybe than other things I've done.” As Gail Hartman, Streep is spry, toned, and unwound, rocking tank tops and Tevas, and generally using her body in ways that her other films rarely require. It’s thrilling to watch Streep strategize and problem-solve, testing her verve against vicious yet moronic criminals. Aside from the impressive river-rafting, half of which was actually done by Streep, there are immense pleasures in watching her spar with Bacon, fluctuating between mockery and disdain, laughing at his ineptitude only to then vow with a bitter resolve that she will kill him. And as preposterous and improbable as that may be given the circumstances and Gail’s genial backstory, you believe her.  

Equally thrilling is Streep’s “return” to the top of the box-office in a bonafide Hollywood hit. (The film opened in first place in its September ‘94 debut.) Adjusted for inflation, it remains one of the top-grossing films of Streep’s career, having earned more than Silkwood, Postcards from the Edge, and even Sophie’s Choice. And as much as I hate to indulge the narrative that Streep’s film career was in any sort of dire hiatus or jeopardy during the early ‘90s, Streep’s success with The River Wild certainly assured producers that the actress could indeed carry an expensive movie and get butts in seats, while perhaps reassuring gatekeepers of both her versatility and commercial appeal. As Bernard Weintraub explained, in his aforementioned Times profile, “studio executives and film makers are examining Streep's skills in a different light: sure she's a great actress, sure she does accents, but maybe she'll open a movie now, maybe the audience will warm to her, maybe the hits will finally resume.”

MATTHEW: Weintraub’s words are fairly prescient. As next week’s film will show, one such touching, crowd-pleasing hit would be right around the corner…

previously on Months of Meryl

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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