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Josh O'Connor Copes with Wildfire in Timely Drama
TV & Streaming

Josh O’Connor Copes with Wildfire in Timely Drama

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Bleecker Street opens “Rebuilding” on November 14.

Loath as I am to label anything as “the movie people need right now,” it’s hard to think of Max Walker-Silverman’s “Rebuilding” in any other terms at the moment. A spare but deeply felt sketch of a drama about a divorced Colorado rancher (a hangdog Josh O’Connor) trying to make sense of what he’s got left in the wake of a devastating wildfire, the story is every bit as gentle as the rest of Walker-Silverman’s work (i.e. 2022’s “A Love Song”), and yet still honest enough to reckon with the heartache of losing one’s home. In fact, it’s only because “Rebuilding” is so raw in its pain that it’s able to resolve into such an effectively comforting balm; the film begins with generations of memory smoldering into 1,000 acres of scorched earth, and from the ashes rescues a new foundation on which its characters might credibly be able to create the next iteration of their lives. 

FRANKENSTEIN, Mia Goth, 2025. ph: Ken Woroner / © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection

The rancher is a man called Dusty — at least, that’s what he’s taken to calling himself. Makes him feel like more of a cowboy than “Thomas,” I guess. His grandparents built the cattle ranch where he lived before the fires, the one with the great view and the bright blue barn smack in the middle. There was a time when Dusty’s ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy) and their young daughter Callie-Rose (Australian newcomer Lily LaTorre, a wonderful find) lived there too, but that’s been over for a while now.

Ruby claims that he “didn’t apply himself,” but I suspect that Dusty just didn’t apply himself enough to her and Callie-Rose; to judge by the silent anguish that sinks across O’Connor’s face at the cattle auction that opens the film, Dusty certainly seems to have been invested in his livestock. You can all but see the life seeping out of him — or a life seeping out of him, anyway. “Can you even be a cowboy without cows?,” someone asks. Dusty isn’t so sure. 

Even worse: He doesn’t have the slightest clue what else he might be. Dusty is so married to a certain image of himself that his first thought after the fire is to take a part-time ranching job a few states away. Ruby and Callie-Rose live the next town over from where Dusty’s ranch once stood, but it seems like being close to his daughter isn’t a crucial part of his self-identity — or to the family legacy he’s dedicated himself to continuing. 

That will gradually begin to change as Dusty mourns what he’s lost forever and takes stock of what he’s still got left. “You get what you get” is a common refrain, a motto of sorts for Ruby’s live-in mother (Amy Madigan, lovely in a role that proves a bit too convenient for such a naturalistic script), and Dusty spends most of this movie trying to understand his portion. 

It doesn’t come easy to him. He moves into a trailer park on a FEMA campsite with roughly a dozen other people who lost their houses in the fire (some of whom lost a lot more than that), and yet none of Dusty’s new neighbors seem quite as paralyzed by the whole ordeal. Not even Mila (an eminently believable Kali Reis), whose husband ran into the flames and never came out. 

Don’t hold your breath for him to show up at a pivotal moment — it’s clear from the opening twangs of Jake Xerxes Fussell’s tender acoustic score that “Rebuilding” won’t be as action-packed as its title implies. Some movies are verbs; this one is self-evidently a noun. Walker-Silverman prefers to express his characters through texture rather than incident, and while it would be patently false to say that nothing “happens” in his latest feature (not in a film where we repeatedly get to see Josh O’Connor work as a crossing guard for buffalo!), the story it tells is best defined by what doesn’t. 

Dusty doesn’t get a loan to rebuild the ranch, as the land won’t be farmable for at least the next 10 years. He doesn’t interfere with Ruby’s current relationship, or do anything to rewind the clock back to when they were married. He doesn’t even unpack the cardboard boxes in his trailer, as he just can’t bring himself to accept that all of this isn’t reversible somehow. Home is supposed to be forever — that’s what makes it home. Even if you move, it’s supposed to still be there.

But as Dusty begins to spend more time with Callie-Rose — often sitting in the parking lot of the local library so they can siphon its wifi signal — and forging generous friendships with the rest of the displaced people in the trailer park (played by a warm and memorable collection of non-professional actors, including Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings musician Binky Griptite), “Rebuilding” accrues a lasting power from all of the impermanence that it collects along the way. Even the film’s most schematic moments make it feel as though Walker-Silverman is simply unearthing something that was already there. 

Madigan’s character spends most of her time reminding Dusty of what he’s forgotten, and to introduce trenchant details he may not have known. It’s because of her that Dusty has reason to reflect on his grandparents, who only created the “forever home” he’s so determined to rebuild because they left Ireland and started over themselves. And, in a particularly egregious scene that manages to survive on the strength of its thematic weight, it’s because of her that Dusty is convinced that memory can be a legacy all its own — one that can be re-seeded even when it feels like nothing else will ever take root again. 

“Rebuilding” contains a number of crucial moments that might seem especially contrived in a film where everything else is so unforced, but O’Connor’s implosive performance helps keep everything grounded to the earth. While Fahy is tasked with most of the capital “A” Acting here (a task she pulls off without a false note), O’Connor can be found in virtually every frame, often staring at the dirt or squinting at the horizon. There are times when it feels like Dusty is little more than a cowboy hat in search of a character, but O’Connor’s marble-mouthed uncertainty reflects Dusty’s resistance to change. It’s as if the guy is so unwilling to imagine a different future than the one he first envisioned that he can’t even get through a sentence if he doesn’t have the whole thing mapped out in advance.

O’Connor can do more with a slight shake of his head than some actors could with an entire Shakespearean monologue, and “Rebuilding” is never more nuanced or humane than when you can feel Dusty retreating from Mila and the other kind souls in the FEMA park, afraid that every step he took forward would take him that much further away from going back. 

But Callie-Rose can’t help but push against that idea, if only because raising a child — if we can call it that — is its own form of rebuilding. And while Dusty isn’t the type to admit this out loud, watching his daughter make new friends and lose precious things of her own inevitably has a profound effect on him. 

The fact is that life is nothing more than a constant series of endings and beginnings; change is the only constant, cliched as that might sound, and while “Rebuilding” stops well short of asking its characters to be grateful for their misfortune, a lasting sense of hope emerges from the opportunity they’re given to re-imagine what home could mean.

How do you build something that lasts in a world where climate change can, has, and will continue to wipe centuries of history right off the map? When the threat of another tragic wildfire is not a matter of “if,” but “when?” “It’s funny,” someone says, “the things you pack and the things you leave.” This quietly affecting little movie finds real poignancy in paying attention to what those things are, and — ultimately — in forging them together so that someone else might have the gift of mourning these ruins one day.

Grade: B+

“Rebuilding” premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Bleecker Street opens the film Friday, November 14.

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November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Greengrass’s Intense Wildfire Drama
TV & Streaming

Paul Greengrass’s Intense Wildfire Drama

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Paul Greengrass and Blumhouse might seem like an odd mix, the former perhaps best known for his meticulous, sensitive docudramas, the latter most famous for low-budget, high-yield genre movies. But though it has its roots in the real world, The Lost Bus — the director’s first film since his 2020 Western News of the World — is arguably his first horror movie, made all the more frightening after the wildfires that swept California earlier this year. Based on real events, it’s a true story of heroism that took place in Northern California just six years earlier during what’s now known as the Camp David fire.

The beginnings of it are depicted in true disaster movie style, with ominous music and a collapsing electric pylon that causes a faulty cable to fall to the ground. The blaze starts small but soon catches hold, and these scenes are right up there in Greengrass’s wheelhouse. We see what looks very much like professional fire-fighters playing themselves, mapping out the path of the fire — or is several fires? — and arguing about the threat it poses. “I don’t think it’s an issue,” says one. “It should be fine.” Famous last words indeed.

It’s all theory at this point, and Greengrass incrementally introduces the reality of such a dangerous fire, and the first men to try to douse the flames soon realize they’re about to be fighting a losing battle. Going into the wildfire is a like a portal into another world; aside from the vicious heat, a constant rain of sparks flies through the smoke-choked air, and not only is hard to see, it’s hard to breathe. All of this is rendered with stunning ease by his VFX team, in scenes that look like a news bulletin from the apocalypse. In this sense, the film has two locations: the sleepy, sunshine town of Paradise and the fiery hellscape of Dante’s Inferno. The effect is jarring, giving the effect of night and day (indeed, it takes a while to realise that all of this happening simultaneously).

Paradise is where we meet Kevin McCay (Matthew McConaughey), a single father who has returned to his hometown from Reno after his father’s death. Kevin has started work as a bus driver but finds himself at the end of the list when shifts are handed out. This is why, as the fire is just about to spin out of control, he agrees to pick up 23 children stranded at Ponderosa Elementary School, plus their teacher Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera). The fire has knocked out the bus’s comms and tracking system — hence the film’s title — leaving Kevin to battle the elements using only his and Mary’s intuition and common sense.

McConaughey starts out in usual mode; this could be his character from Mud with a few extra dollars in his pocket. He lives in a tumbledown comfort with a sick dog, his ailing mother and his son Shaun (Levi McConaughey). His relationship with Shaun is fraught, to say the least. As we see in an early scene, Kevin’s attempts to be a dad are lacklustre at best, and it ends with Shaun shouting, “I f*cking hate you. I wish you were dead.” These words are still ringing in Kevin’s ears when the disaster strikes, and the blaze takes on a more personal significance, a metaphor for Kevin’s mental state as he enters purgatory.

As with all Greengrass’s films, though, this is a film about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances, which is no doubt what drew him to Brad Ingelby’s very human script. Once the chips are down, though, McConaughey effortlessly switches up to action mode, and the film starts to resemble a fever dream of Speed. Alongside him, the scared but somehow quietly reassuring presence of America Ferrera leavens the potential for cliched action-hero theatrics by giving the film a rare but for once very real sense of peril. The same goes for Ashlie Atkinson as bus controller Ruby, whose very human guilt is palpable throughout.

That we know, or can safely assume, that the story worked out well for the kids does take away some of the intensity, as does the film’s determination to make this film a moral journey and not just an experiential thrill ride. Nevertheless, it’s a trip in more than one sense of the word, and yet another streaming release this year that demands to be seen on the big screen.

Title: The Lost Bus
Festival: Toronto (Special Presentations)
Director: Paul Greengrass
Screenwriters: Paul Greengrass and Brad Ingelsby
Cast: Matthew McConaughey, America Ferrera, Yul Vazquez, Ashlie Atkinson, Spencer Watson
Distributor: Apple TV+
Running time: 2 hr 9 mins

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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Content Creator Arrested, Home Birth Death
Celebrity News

Border Patrol Arrest Two Firefighters During Washington Wildfire

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Now THIS is not what you expect in the middle of a wildfire. Two firefighters battling the massive Bear Gulch fire in Washington state were arrested by border patrol on Wednesday in a move that shocked their fellow crew members and left the public asking: what really went down?

RELATED: Trump Threatens National Guard Deployment To “Out Of Control” Chicago As Governor, JB Pritzker, And Obama Send Stern Messages (VIDEO)

Firefighters Battling Flames — And The Feds?!

According to on-the-ground reports, federal agents rolled up on two private contractor fire crews around 9:30 a.m. and demanded IDs. Additionally, the crews were among the 400 people deployed to contain Washington’s largest active wildfire. One firefighter said they were told not to film the incident, but photos still made it out. In one image, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection vehicle is clearly visible, with officers wearing “Police” vests arresting one firefighter and restraining another.

“You risked your life out here to save the community,” a firefighter said. “This is how they treat us.”

What Exactly Went Down?

Sources say the crews had been sent to cut wood near Lake Cushman when they were confronted. While waiting for a supervisor, the feds demanded everyone line up and show ID and things escalated quickly. One firefighter asked if a detained crew member’s family could say goodbye, but was immediately shut down. Reportedly, the arrested individuals weren’t even allowed a proper send-off before being taken away.

Furthermore, one firefighter revealed to The Seattle Times:

“I asked them if his (family) can say goodbye to him because they’re family, and they’re just ripping them away,” he shared. “And this is what he said: ‘You need to get the (expletive) out of here. I’m gonna make you leave.’”

It’s remarkably dumb for federal officers to interfere with or arrest men fighting an active wildfire—even if all of the firefighters are all illegal aliens (and they aren’t).

This episode is sadly symbolic our the government’s burn-it-all-down approach to this issue. pic.twitter.com/oKkpqFH7Of

— Patrick Jaicomo (@pjaicomo) August 28, 2025

Is There An Explanation Behind These Arrests?

As of now, officials from Border Patrol, ICE, and Homeland Security have stayed real quiet, offering no explanation. Fire team leadership claims the arrests didn’t interfere with the operation, but let’s be honest—when agents show up mid-blaze and start pulling people off the line? That’s a whole new level of disruption. The fire is currently only 13% contained and has already burned nearly 9,000 acres. With five of the six hand crews being private contractors, it raises serious questions about how immigration policy is being enforced in disaster zones—and who’s really being targeted.

RELATED: Donald Trump Says He’s Considering An Executive Order To Alter Immigration Crackdown Amid Labor Shortage Concerns

What Do You Think Roomies?

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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