The outrun movie storyline. The Outrun, the story of a 29-year-old Scottish woman in the throes of, and recovery from (though not necessarily in that order), an increasingly desperate alcoholism, is a drama with a lot of things going for it.
It stars Saoirse Ronan, a great actor who, no one will be surprised to hear, lives inside this role as if she’d occupied it her whole life. The film is based on Amy Liptrot’s 2017 addiction memoir (the heroine is now named Rona), and the German director Nora Fingscheidt (“System Crasher”) adapts it in a somber, meditative, structurally free-form way that’s all about broken surfaces and moods of fragmentation and despair (and mutating dyed hair).
The Outrun is a 2024 drama film directed by Nora Fingscheidt from a screenplay she co-wrote with Amy Liptrot, based on the 2016 memoir of the same name by Liptrot. It stars Saoirse Ronan, Saskia Reeves, Stephen Dillane, Lauren Lyle, Paapa Essiedu, Izuka Hoyle, Nabil Elouahabi, Naomi Wirthner, Jack Rooke Eilidh Fisher, Tony Hamilton-Croft and Danyal Ismail.
Film Review for The Outrun
There are plenty of directors who show off their style and verve but arguably we don’t celebrate those who take tricky subject matter and present it in a way that is artistic but also looks effortless. Nora Fingscheidt definitely deserves to receive plaudits in that regard as she immerses us immediately and completely in the headspace of Rona (Saorise Ronan), a recovering alcoholic, who has brought the memories of the past home with her from London to her family’s farm on the Orkney Islands as she tries to get her life back on track.
Based on the memoir by Amy Liptrott, who shares adaptation duties with Fingscheidt, this, just as most people’s recovery from alcoholism, is not a linear story, but one in which the traumas of the past intertwine with the challenges of the present. It rests on a performance from Ronan that moves seamlessly between Rona’s various emotional states – her character may rarely be grounded but we always know exactly where we are with her.
From the off we can almost smell the seaweed on the Orkney beach, a connection to the here and now and a memory from childhood, but distances of time and space are collapsible in Fingscheidt’s hands, one feeding into the other in Rona’s head. This malleability of thought gives the film an immediacy often lacking from addiction films, allowing the action to move from the reality of Rona’s life to her free-flowing thoughts about Orcadian myths like the stoor worm sea serpent and shape-shifting seal creatures the selkies, some of which are presented with immersive animation. Although there are some familiar beats here, including AA meetings and relapses, by presenting them in fragmentary fashion, Fingscheidt keeps us tightly bound to Rona’s emotional journey.
Alcoholism is presented in all its complexity. We can see the lure of escape it offers Rona in flashbacks to the life she shared with her boyfriend (Paapa Essiedu), hedonistic nights of abandon in pubs and clubs that frequently end in violence and loss of memory. Mornings of regret and apology are just another part of the destructive cycle. These things crash over one another with the energy of sea on rocks, the sight of which often triggers thoughts for Rona, now she has retreated to a place where temptation is less in her path. The Orkneys aren’t simply a haven, however, as they also hold childhood trauma surrounding her bipolar dad (Stephen Dillane) and devoutly religious mum (Saskia Reeves).
Nature is also complex on the Orkney islands. There’s a brutality to the sea and the weather patterns, which mean journeys cannot always be made when scheduled, but also a vulnerability to the animals found there, highlighted by a job Rona takes in a bid to locate and protect the endangered corncrake. Though the metaphor is never overstated, Rona too is subject to the changing patterns of her own nature and, through the course of the film she may not achieve anything so easy or trite as bending them to her will, but there’s a suggestion that learning to weather them will be enough.
The Outrun (2024)
Directed by: Nora Fingscheidt
Starring: Saoirse Ronan, Saskia Reeves, Stephen Dillane, Lauren Lyle, Paapa Essiedu, Izuka Hoyle, Nabil Elouahabi, Naomi Wirthner, Jack Rooke Eilidh Fisher, Tony Hamilton-Croft, Danyal Ismail
Screenplay by: Nora Fingscheidt, Amy Liptrot
Production Design by: Andy Drummond
Cinematography by: Yunus Roy Imer
Film Editing by: Stephan Bechinger
Costume Design by: Grace Snell
Art Direction by: Heather Donnelly, Caroline Grebbell, Martin Kelly, Martin Kelly
Music by: John Gürtler, Jan Miserre
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: StudioCanal
Release Date: January 19, 2024 (Sundance)
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