With a 96%
score on Rotten Tomatoes, First Cow arrives on Blu-ray™ (plus DVD & Digital) September 8
from Lionsgate. From critically renowned director Kelly Reichardt, the film
world premiered at the Telluride Film Festival in August 2019 and screened to
great acclaim at the New York Film Festival in September 2019 and the Berlin International Film Festival in
February 2020. First Cow stars John Magaro, Orion Lee, Golden Globe®
and Primetime Emmy® nominee Toby Jones (2013, Outstanding Lead Actor in a
Miniseries or a Movie, The Girl), Ewen Bremner, Primetime Emmy® nominee
René Auberjonois (2001, Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series, TV’s “The
Practice”) and Alia Shawkat. Including a bonus featurette, First Cowwill be available on Blu-ray (plus DVD &
Digital) for the suggested retail price of $24.99.
Two travelers, on the run from a band of vengeful hunters
in the 1820s Northwest, dream of striking it rich — but their tenuous plan to
make their fortune on the frontier comes to rely on the secret use of a wealthy
businessman’s prized dairy cow. With their scheme landing somewhere between
honest ingenuity and pure grift, renowned filmmaker Kelly Reichardt finds a
graceful and deeply moving origin story of America in their unlikely friendship
and fragile life at the margins.
BLU-RAY / DVD / DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES
“A Place in This World” Featurette
CAST
John Magaro The Big Short, Overlord,
TV’s “Orange
Is the New Black”
Orion Lee Skyfall, Star Wars: The
Last Jedi, TV’s
“Tyrant”
Toby Jones The Hunger Games, Jurassic World:
Fallen Kingdom, The Girl
Orion Lee (left) as “King-Lu” and John Magaro (right) as “Cookie” in director Kelly Reichardt’s FIRST COW, released by A24 Films. Credit : Allyson Riggs / A24 Films
Kelly Reichardt’s FIRST COW offers a tale of friendship and American dreams, set in a hardscrabble frontier outpost in early 19th century Oregon territory, place that is less a community than a microcosm of the flaws of capitalism carved out of a green, lush wilderness. Two friends, a quiet, gentle baker known as Cookie (John Magaro) and a talkative, ambitious Chinese immigrant named King-Lu (Orion Lee) hatch a scheme to sell baked goods made with milk pilfered from the area’s first and only cow, the property of the wealthy local bigwig, known as Chief Factor (an excellent Toby Jones), who rules the outpost like the British lord he fancies himself.
There is, of course, a cow, a beautiful
brown pedigreed milk cow, the first cow in the territory reportedly
but certainly the first at the outpost. Chief Factor intended to
bring the cow, a bull and a calf from San Francisco but only the cow
survived the trip. Reichardt shows the arrival of the cow in glowing
light, as if it is a magical creature.
FIRST COW is a most engaging film, one
that often feels like a fairy tale as it unfolds it’s simple tale but
a film that deepens as it unfolds, thanks in large part to the
wonderful performances by John Magaro and Orion Lee as the two
friends at the center of the tale. The drama was set to debut in
theaters in March, and had opened in some already, just as the
coronavirus pandemic shut theaters down. Still, the film was already
garnering awards buzz, and it is now getting a release on
video-on-demand starting July 10.
Reichardt’s languid, contemplative, unconventional Western opens with a quote from William Blake, “the bird a nest, the spider a web, man friendship,” and explores the bonds of friendship, the power of dreams and ambitions, and the flaws in the foundational American myths of capitalism. The film weaves its simple but irresistible tale around dual themes: male friendship and economics, creating an unforgettable tapestry .
Reichardt makes her points about
economics subtly and indirectly, presenting the situation and leaving
us to draw our own conclusions. She is more direct in painting the
portrait of friendship, male bonding in particular, leaving the two
leads to create a human warmth between these two appealing
characters.
Kelly Reichardt is a master of indie
film-making, but this is perhaps her most accessible and story-driven
film. There are a number of parallels to her other films here,
including an intimate focus, the Oregon setting, and a languid pace.
Reichardt co-wrote the script with Jon Raymond, adapted from his
novel “Half-Life.” The William Blake quote (which also
opens the novel) brings to mind another quirky indie Western, Jim
Jarmusch’s DEAD MAN (and in fact Gary Farmer has a small role in this
film) but mostly there are numerous overlaps with Reichardt’s other
films, such as CERTAIN WOMEN, WENDY AND LUCY, and the Western MEEKS
CUTOFF.
The tale of friendship and life
struggle strikes a special, deep chord. The film opens in the
present, with a woman (Alia Shawkat) and her dog wandering across a
partly wooded landscape, until the dog finds something: two human
skeletons shallowly buried side-by-side. The film then shifts to the
past, leaving us puzzled, although the meaning is made clear at the
end of the film.
In the wild frontier of 1820s Oregon
Territory, a man called Cookie Figowitz (John Magaro) is working for
a rough crew of fur-trappers. The meat-hungry trappers are less
impressed by Cookie’s considerable skills as a cook and baker than
angry about his less-impressive skills as a hunter. A quiet, gentle
soul, Cookie is happiest foraging alone in the forest for mushrooms
and berries in the forest, where one day he comes across a naked man
hiding under a bush. The naked man tells him he is being pursued but
a group of Russians, and kind-hearted Cookie takes him in, feeding
him and giving him shelter. It turns out that the man is not Native
American as Cookie first assumed but a multi-lingual, well-educated
Chinese immigrant adventurer named King-Lu (Orion Lee), seeking his
fortune in the new territory. The two part ways but a a friendship is
already taking root.
When the two meet again at the frontier
trading post, their situation is reversed, and it is Cookie who is in
dire straits after the fur-trappers fired him. It is King-Lu’s turn
to offer Cookie food and shelter, in the form of an abandoned shack
King-Lu is living in outside town. Spending time together, the
friendship kindles and they share their stories and their dreams.
Talkative King-Lu is ambitious, dreaming of striking it rich, while
mild-mannered Cookie’s dreams are more modest, mostly a bakery where
he can practice the trade he loves. King-Lu also has a bit of larceny
in him, so when he learns about Cookie’s skill with baking, he
hatches a plan to make money with that talent. All they need do is
steal milk from that precious cow.
This is no small task as the cow is the
closely-guarded prized possession of the town’s wealthy ruling power,
a harsh man known as Chief Factor (Toby Jones), but they come up with
a plan. Soon they are selling what they call “oily cakes,”
a donut-like fritter that Cookie makes with the pilfered milk, served
with a little wild honey. The treats are a huge hit, selling out
daily and pressing the friends to make more.
When a dignitary known as the Captain
(Scott Shepard) plans to visit, Chief Factor is desperate to impress
him with his taste and sophistication, and instructs the baker to
create a particularly delicate pastry as a show piece, putting the
friends uncomfortably close to his scrutiny.
Yes, there is a comic element to this
scheme but there is an ominous feeling as well as we also know this
can’t last. However, mostly this is a quiet, thoughtful drama about
personal individual struggles as well as a portrait of male
friendship. and a study of the rhythms of daily life in this frontier
town. Like other Reichert’s films, it has a languid pace, an intimate
personal focus, and invites leaning-in, rather than the wide-open
spaces and myth making of the typical Western.
The visual aspect is striking, with
scenes tightly framed and a focus on small details, often of the
natural world around them, rather than the usual grand vistas of
Westerns. The images are often quite beautiful, skillfully shot by
cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt.
The key to the film is the friendship
at its heart. There is enormous charm in both of the characters and
feeling of authenticity and human warmth in their unlikely
friendship. As they spend time together, they share bits of their
personal history, although Cookie is more forthcoming than King-Lu.
Cookie was orphaned when his father died, after a life traveling
around, but found a sense of home with the baker to whom he was
apprenticed. We learn less about brainy, resourceful King-Lu, mostly
that he ran away from home when he was young, but there are
intriguing hints, like his obvious education. Yet there is his
telling comment when he hears about the milk cow’s pedigree, that she
has an even more illustrious family history than his own.
Both friends see the danger in what
they are doing but deciding when to get out is hard – the temptation
of “one more time” is powerful. King-Lu pushes to keep
going a little longer, despite Cookie’s fears. King-Lu is burn with
ambition, seeing great possibility in the wide-open new world and
dreaming of setting himself up in San Francisco to pursue great
wealth. The more cautious Cookie just wants a comfortable home, a
life where he can practice his love of baking, and he sees the risk
more clearly. The dynamic of their differing personalities and the
bond of friendship that ties them keeps us involved.
The acting is superb, with Lee and
Magaro working brilliantly together and crafting wonderful,
memorable, layered characters. In fact the film is filled with
remarkable, often odd and other fine performances here too. Toby
Jones is powerful as Chief Factor, a brutal man who both egotisitcal
and insecure. He resents being on the frontier, wrapping himself in
what luxuries he can and acting like a feudal lord of a manor. He
treats others callously and disdains the struggling residents of the
town he rules. Rene Auberjonois, in his last role, plays the
unsmiling, hawk-eyed unnamed man with a crow, charged with guarding
the precious cow. Gary Farmer plays a local Native American leader
whose wife, played by Sabrina Mary Morrison, serves as his
translator. Her translation is sometimes comic but the characters
serve to draw attention to the increasing marginalization of the
Native peoples and other references to racism at the outpost.
Reichert incorporates these details but never comments on them
pointedly.
FIRST COW is an affecting, thoughtful bittersweet tale that warm us with its contemplative portrait of friendship while it chills us with its economic brutality. It is hard to describe but it has a hauntingly wonder to it that lingers, as does the haunting memory of its remarkable characters and their timeless human bond. FIRST COW is available on demand on various platforms starting July 10.
Watch the new trailer for festival breakout FIRST COW, from acclaimed filmmaker Kelly Reichardt:
A captivating portrait of friendship set against the early American west, Reichardt has crafted a moving and critically acclaimed vision of the origins of the American Dream. Starring John Magaro, Orion Lee, and Toby Jones.
Kelly Reichardt once again trains her perceptive and patient eye on the Pacific Northwest, this time evoking an authentically hardscrabble early nineteenth century way of life. A taciturn loner and skilled cook (John Magaro) has traveled west and joined a group of fur trappers in Oregon Territory, though he only finds true connection with a Chinese immigrant (Orion Lee) also seeking his fortune; soon the two collaborate on a successful business, although its longevity is reliant upon the clandestine participation of a nearby wealthy landowner’s prized milking cow. From this simple premise Reichardt constructs an interrogation of foundational Americana that recalls her earlier triumph Old Joy in its sensitive depiction of male friendship, yet is driven by a mounting suspense all its own. Reichardt again shows her distinct talent for depicting the peculiar rhythms of daily living and ability to capture the immense, unsettling quietude of rural America. FIRST COW stars John Magaro, Orion Lee, Toby Jones, and Ewen Bremner