Behold the best movie of the year. Alpha leads the pack literally and figuratively. Vividly realistic if surreal sequences of life in Europe 20,000 years ago cradle a family love story and one of the best dog stories ever.
What’s not to love?
The most intense opening scene of an action-adventure movie ever leads to a tightly edited if stately 96 minutes of 3D IMAX intensity. The action sequences come roughly every ten minutes, each incredible. Hell, the second scene in the nearby trailer is brutal evidence. Damn. It’s totally worth it in IMAX 3D.
This is a very well structured film, from the first flashback five minutes in, to when it rejoins the main narrative arc twenty minutes later, to when earlier scenes are recalled at key dramatic junctures. Bravo!
Oh yeah, dog lovers pretty much gotta see Alpha. In dog movie terms, it’s the OG leader of the pack.
All hail Albert Hughes for writing the screenplay and directing this magisterial film. A tight 96 minutes, it is perfectly elemental, albeit overtly manipulative. That last is partly because it’s PG-13 but mostly because it compresses hundreds of years of evolution into the course of one transformative winter. Only in the movies, as they say, and yet this is the most realistic cinematic depiction of prehistoric man I’ve ever seen.
The scariest scene in the movie is the second scene of the nearby trailer. If your loved one can handle that, they’re good to go for this intense PG-13 coming of age movie.
The action sequences are circumstantially surreal and their consequences biologically surreal.
Movie hocus-pocus aside, Alpha deserves hosannas for an apparent devotion to anthropological accuracy, or at least so it appears. From the authentic sounding prehistoric language, to the crafting of flint blades, to the family and tribal structure, the details feel authentic, notwithstanding the surreal action sequences.
One observation: back then, men were men and nuclear families were all.
Moviepaws has 7 burning questions about Alpha.