I wanted to shout at the screen, “What next, Captain Fantastic?”Ĭuz I’m thinking he didn’t have an answer.Quick Answer : Captain Fantastic (2016) follows a man who has chosen to raise his entire family in the wilderness, in part because of his complex belief system. A finale intended to be soaring, emotionally involving and lovely felt cloying and self-satisfied and implausible. They have legitimate concerns about the safety and the future of their grandchildren - concerns even Ben has to admit he might not be equipped to handle.īut just when “Captain Fantastic” seems to be pulling the curtain back on Ben’s irresponsible, hypocritical game plan, things take a ridiculous and off-putting turn, with the Smug-0-Meter pinning the needle. To Ross’ credit, the wealthy parents with their environmentally incorrect mansion on a golf course aren’t portrayed as clueless capitalistic pigs. Dowd is a treasure in just about every role she plays.) (Ann Dowd is wonderful as Leslie’s mother, who’s more forgiving toward Ben, in large part because he has brought her six grandchildren out of the woods, and she’s grateful for the chance to hold them and tell them they’re loved. Along the way, they steal goods from a grocery store (in a well-choreographed maneuver indicating they’ve done this before), and they stay overnight with Ben’s sister and her husband (Kathryn Hahn and Steve Zahn, both excellent) and their two meathead, video-game-loving sons, who regard their cousins as dirty freaks who live in the woods.įrank Langella is perfectly cast as Leslie’s father, a wealthy Arizona businessman who blames Ben for his beloved daughter’s death and doesn’t want Ben at the traditional church funeral. Worried that Leslie’s bourgeois parents won’t honor Leslie’s wish to be cremated with her ashes literally flushed down a toilet, Ben gathers the kids and fires up the family van for a road trip. We find ourselves rooting for the kids to wise up to his act. The more we know this guy, the less we like him and the less we buy his bull-bleep. Leslie kills herself, and Ben delivers the news to his children in blunt, almost cruel fashion. For all of Ben’s talk about how he and Leslie had an all-consuming love for one another and a mutual passion for flipping the bird to the real world and creating their own existence far from the concrete walls and the internet and cell phones and selfishness and corporate greed, it appears Leslie was wavering on the plan and considering a move back home so she could reconnect with life and deal with her condition. I mean, what’s the plan here Ben? You gonna keep your six kids in the woods forever, until you die and they’re middle-aged? Unless they meet another family of societal drop-outs, are they not to experience love (or even lust) and have families of their own? Because if you release them into the conventional world you so despise, they’ll be eaten alive, as they’ve had NO preparation for the kind of life.Īs for the children’s mother, Leslie: She’s bipolar and suicidal, and she’s in the hospital, and she might not be coming back. Ross seems to be painting a portrait of Utopia, but Ben is so intense and the kids are trained to be such robotic parrots, blurting out memorized answers in a way clearly intended to please their father and only rarely questioning his authority, it feels more like the children are being imprisoned in the wilderness and robbed of the opportunity to get to know the world, to make friends, to develop a first crush, to fall in love. Oh yeah, and each eventually must learn how to hunt and kill deer and other prey. Ben’s six children are home-schooled - well, woods-schooled, seeing as how they live deep in the Pacific Northwest - and their father is a master instructor, teaching them to read and appreciate the classics, learn multiple languages, play instruments and engage in enlightened conversation about socialism and capitalism and the exploitation of the common man around the ol’ fire pit at night. Mortensen’s Ben is a handsome, brilliant, resourceful and loving father - but he’s also as didactic and single-minded as a boot camp sergeant or even a budding cult leader. ![]() ![]() Shree Crooks as Zaja (from left), Viggo Mortensen as Ben, Samantha Isler as Kielyr, Nicholas Hamilton as Rellian, Annalise Basso as Vespyr, George MacKay as Bodevan, and Charlie Shotwell as Nai, in Matt Ross’ “Captain Fantastic.” | Cathy Kanavy / Bleecker Street
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