‘Rebuilding’ review: Josh O’Connor plays a cowboy whose ranch burns down
Life has a way of taking things from us that we think we canโt do without. Often that means the death of a loved one, but sometimes it can be home โ and with it, our grounding in the world. When we meet Dusty, the laconic protagonist of โRebuilding,โ he has already lost so much. His marriage is over. His parents have been dead and buried for quite a while. But as this modest drama begins, Dusty is grappling with the most crushing of blows: His cherished 200-acre family ranch in Colorado has burned down in a devastating wildfire. He survived but he might as well be a ghost.
Dusty is played by Josh OโConnor, who lately has cornered the market on sensitive, passive outsiders. With his wiry frame and shy eyes, the British actor has demonstrated in films such as โLa Chimeraโ and โThe Mastermindโ an appetite for soft-spoken characters who exude a gentle masculinity. We donโt know if Dustyโs voice is noticeably hushed because of his recent tragedy, but as he tries to pick up the pieces, this lonesome cowboy drifts through his days, doing his best to pretend heโs holding up OK.
Writer-director Max Walker-Silvermanโs second feature shares with his first a sympathy for strong, silent types. His flinty 2022 debut โA Love Songโ was drenched in melancholy, casting Dale Dickey and Wes Studi as aging childhood friends reunited, a tentative romance faintly sparking. Similarly, โRebuildingโ is a tale of grief and what-ifs populated by everyday folks who speak in terse tones. The movie radiates the spare, rugged poetry of a short story or a John Prine song. (Fittingly, the musician appears on the soundtrack.)
OโConnor keeps Dustyโs inner life a mystery as he reluctantly moves into a beat-up trailer at a temporary FEMA camp, struggling to make it hospitable for his grade-school daughter Callie-Rose (Lily LaTorre), who primarily lives with Dustyโs ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy) and Rubyโs boyfriend, Robbie (Sam Engbring). Dusty is not a bad father or a snide former spouse โ everybody in his orbit likes him, including Rubyโs ailing mother Bess (Amy Madigan). But when Callie-Rose informs Dusty that Ruby said he underachieved in school, we believe her. โRebuildingโ doesnโt reveal much about Dusty before the ranch was incinerated, but what eventually becomes clear is that heโs always been something of a disappointment.
Itโs a performance that requires OโConnor to hint at an ineffable void. The character operates at a remove from even those closest to him โ he has a kindly spirit, but he canโt quite connect. Dusty and Ruby were adolescent sweethearts, but the audience doesnโt need to know the whole backstory to guess why they broke up. Heโs the kind of guy weighed down by an internal inertia, asleep while standing up, stuck in a rut. At least he had his ranch. But after the wildfire, Dustyโs omnipresent cowboy hat is all that remains from the only life heโs ever known.
In keeping with Walker-Silvermanโs naturalistic approach, โRebuildingโ eschews a conventional plot, instead observing Dustyโs negotiation of an outside world heโs tried to avoid. He gingerly makes friends at the FEMA camp, most memorably with Mila, depicted with gruff authenticity by Kali Reis. This de facto support group has no big inspirational speeches to offer Dusty, just a weary resilience to keep going because, really, what else can they do? Some of the filmโs finest moments involve OโConnor ceding the spotlight to his co-stars, each of them so offhandedly genuine one might assume Walker-Silverman gathered actual wildfire survivors.
The movieโs verisimilitude may trigger some Los Angeles viewers who know all too well the pain of recovering from a natural disaster. When โRebuildingโ premiered at Sundance in January, Southern California festivalgoers couldnโt help but feel a queasy dรฉjร vu: The Eaton and Palisades fires were still raging, destroying communities and displacing so many. That horror and sorrow loomed heavy over those initial screenings, and no doubt for many in our city, 10 months will hardly be enough time to enter the proper headspace to appreciate Dustyโs processing of his disorienting new normal.
But while Walker-Silverman couldnโt have imagined his movieโs jarring real-world parallels, โRebuildingโ is as much a character study as it is a warning about our increasingly fragile planet and the beloved places we call home. The storyโs studied minor-key tone can occasionally come across as mannered, yet โRebuildingโ possesses its own delicate grace, especially once Dusty endures other losses โ some personal, others more existential. Walker-Silverman introduces a minor twist near the end that comes across as a little too narratively convenient, but one can hardly begrudge him seeking a sliver of hope for those whose sense of place has been obliterated. As Dusty learns, when youโve lost nearly everything, all youโve got is whateverโs left behind.
‘Rebuilding’
Rated: PG, for thematic elements, some drug material, and brief language
Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes
Playing: Opens Friday, Nov. 21 at AMC Century City 15 and AMC Burbank 16