Fresh off of its Best Picture, Director, and Actress wins at the Academy Awards, Nomadland is now available to bring home on Blu-ray.
The film was among the few films to play all the major film festivals last year. It became the first film to take home the top awards at both Venice and Toronto. Chloé Zhao is a phenomenal filmmaker and and the Oscar wins and nominations show it. It’s been a long awards season and she deserves some rest ahead of Marvel launching Eternals later this year.
Some excerpts from my original review published last September during the New York Film Festival:
What would you do if your town suffered an economic collapse? Fern (Frances McDormand) decides to pack up her bags and drives across the country when the mining town shuts down. After working for years in Nevada, a new opportunity presents itself. It may not be what the average person would do but Fern becomes a nomad. She lives life outside of what people call a normal society. What we get as a result is a view of the American West that we don’t usually get to see on screen. It’s such a credit to Zhao’s vision as a filmmaker.
This isn’t the typical road movie. It’s certainly not Planes, Trains, and Automobiles–the John Hughes picture is the ultimate road movie. Through Fern’s eyes, we travel through South Dakota, Nevada, and the Pacific Northwest. This is a woman who not only loses her job but is also a widow. In addition to real-life nomads Linda May and Swankie, Fern develops a close friendship with Dave (David Strathairn).
Behind the camera, Zhao pulls triple duty as director, screenwriter, and editor. But beyond that, Nomadland makes a bold choice in the casting front. They could have cast regular actors to portray nomads. Instead, they go with real-life nomads: Linda May, Swankie, and Bob Wells. This really gives the film a sense of authenticity but I can’t be surprised after viewing The Rider in 2018. Coincidentally, Frances McDormand saw The Rider at Toronto in 2017 and the rest is history. While Zhao goes big with Marvel in her next turn, I’ll be interested in seeing what happens next for her career.
There are a number of members of the nomad community in the film but it never feels like a documentary. Not at all. Frances McDormand and David Strathairn are obviously the two big-name actors in the film. The filmmakers could easily have cast an unknown in the leading role but they decided against it. While an unknown actor would have still worked, having both McDormand and Strathairn here should help the film draw some interest. McDormand should certainly contend for an Oscar especially in the year of the Indies and Streamers.
Bonus Features
- The Forgotten America
- Deleted Scenes
- Lunch Interrupted
- A Gift From God
- Telluride Premiere Q&A with Frances McDormand and Chloé Zhao
DIRECTOR/SCREENWRITER: Chloé Zhao
CAST: Frances McDormand, David Strathairn, Linda May, Swankie