Tubi Films: The Thicket (2024) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Tubi Films

American martial artist, former Batman: The Animated Series screenwriter and Bubba Ho-Tep novelist Joe R. Lansdale’s 2013 pulpy western The Thicket has been a long gestating passion project for actor Peter Dinklage as far back as 2014.  Originally starting pre-production in 2020 just before the COVID-19 pandemic hit and delayed production all the way to 2023, it’s an ensemble wintry Western action thriller with hints of Southern Gothic sardonic flair spoken of the same breath as The Great Silence or more recently The Hateful Eight featuring Juliette Lewis, Metallica frontman James Hetfield, Macon Blair and even Arliss Howard as an old testament preacher leaving ample room for a Lewis-Howard Natural Born Killers reunion.  Moreover, as part of the limited theatrical distribution deal via Samuel Goldwyn Films, the film is owned outright by American ad-supported streaming service Tubi Films and represents the latest digital movie giant to crossover into theatrical film production and distribution.
 
Jack Parker (Levon Hawke) and his sister Lula (Esme Creed-Miles) are just trying to survive a smallpox epidemic in Southeastern Texas which already claimed both of their parents when they’re accosted by a ragtag group of bandits led by feral woman Cut Throat Bill (Juliette Lewis) who murder their grandfather but not before kidnapping Lula and leaving Jack for dead.  With no one or nowhere to turn to for help in tracking down and rescuing his sister, he happens upon a bounty-hunter dwarf named Reginald Jones (Peter Dinklage) and his grave-digging ex-slave partner played by Gbenga Akinnagbe who agree to help for a price.  Picking up street-smart prostitute Jimmy Sue (Leslie Grace) in tow as a fellow gunslinger, the unlikely foursome heads into the labyrinthine Big Thicket forest of Southeast Texas in pursuit of the bandits in the hopes of reuniting Jack with his sister Lula.

 
Partially a Western survival action thriller set in the snowy winter set during a pandemic, partially a soul searching exercise for Peter Dinklage in his most involving role since Cyrano while playing off of the threatening deadly rattlesnake energies of Juliette Lewis in her most ferocious role since Mallory Knox in Natural Born Killers, The Thicket while inevitably going to streaming is a scope widescreen panoramic snapshot of the gritty unforgiving nature of the Old West.  Largely set out in the open woods in the middle of the winter which had to have proven difficult for the cast and crew, it marks a refreshing mixture of faithfully adapting the novel while channeling Dinklage’s own obsessions, frailties and emotional weathers onscreen.

 
From start to finish, The Thicket looks splendid in scope panoramic 2.35:1 widescreen by Don’t Tell a Soul cinematographer Guillermo Garza who films Canada standing in for Texas beautifully in all of its icy wintry splendor.  Though inevitably going to the small screen where most viewers will see it, this is definitely a big-screen piece with occasionally staggering vistas for being an otherwise tightly budgeted production.  The moody ambient, quasi-electronic score by Ray Suen represents the musical and soundtrack department manager’s first original compositional work in music that sounds not wholly unlike the brooding low hum melodies of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis. 

 
The ensemble cast across the board is solid with Wildcat and Blink Twice actor Levon Hawke turning over a serviceable leading performance as the beleaguered brother Jack trying to save his sister.  Veteran actors Juliette Lewis with her deep near-masculine voice and fierce eyes as well as Arliss Howard in a glorified cameo light the screen on fire.  Though make no mistake, this project from top to bottom is 100% Peter Dinklage’s film.  From the themes to the characterization to the amount of latitude the role granted the actor, he’s unquestionably the heart and soul radiating through this thing.  Oh and Metallica fans will enjoy seeing James Hetfield onscreen despite recent gripes made he doesn’t enjoy acting that much.

 
Given a limited theatrical run on September 6th precluding the eventual streaming premiere, The Thicket is a fully digital workflow project of an American western which feels curiously like a modestly sized Spaghetti Western quickie.  Full of a mashup of characters reminiscent of Lucio Fulci’s Four of the Apocalypse with equal emphasis on racial politics of the time, sexual dynamics and an unlikely surrogate family unit unified by their shared desire for money and settling down, it’s a nice little rough and ragged snow and ice covered western thriller and character study piece for Dinklage who clearly strongly identifies with the character of Reginald Jones.  Though intended for online digital viewing on the ad-supported service eventually, those keen on the resurgence of the modestly sized American western are inclined to see this on the big screen ad-free while they still can.  An unlikely solid little gem of an action adventure thriller in the Old West.

--Andrew Kotwicki