All things considered, it’s not a bad hook for a “boy and his dog” survival adventure developed by director Albert Hughes: The boy is Keda (Kodi Smit-McPhee), a young member of a tribe ca. 20,000 years ago separated from his hunting party and left behind when he’s presumed dead; the dog is a wolf that Keda nurses back to health, and becomes his sole companion on his long journey home. Hughes spends a lot of time on sweeping landscape shots, occasionally leaning too hard into the CGI animals populating Keda’s world. But it’s a generally effective piece of mostly-wordless storytelling, from Keda’s primitive attempts at domesticating the animal he calls Alpha, to applying the basic skills and patience required to stay alive in a forbidding world. It’s also an efficient narrative, clocking in at a tight 96 minutes of tension and episodic dangers. The connection between Keda and Alpha ultimately feels fairly secondary to Keda’s quest to reunite with his parents, which might make it feel like false advertising, but there’s a simple satisfaction in a coming-of-age tale where the stakes are life and death.
By
Scott Renshaw