'The Grey': Shades of Horror

By Michael S. GoldbergeriBerkshires Film Critic
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by Michael S. Goldberger  

Open Roads 
Liam Neeson has to hope is bite is worse than his bark in the wilderness survival film 'The Grey.'
Death, the great unknown, haunts at every instance in director Joe Carnahan's "The Grey," a tale of survival as exhausting as it is unsettling. This is brutal, in-your-face stuff, a big, icy metaphor set in Alaska that won't relent in its harsh fatalism. Yet, just because it has some high-falutin' philosophy doesn't earn it the right to pawn off a copout ending.

Starring Liam Neeson in a sharp turn as Ottway, the oil company-employed hunter who takes charge when a group of plane crash survivors are left stranded in the wolf-invested freeze, the saga certainly has its moments. Adapted by Ian McKenzie Jeffers and director Carnahan from Jeffers' short story "Ghost Walker," it's actually quite literate.

out of 4
Channeling shades of bargain basement Coleridge and Jack London, tightly knit into a series of fairly well directed causes of high-tension anxiety, it follows the usual pattern of its genre. It's up to us to guess who, if any, will survive the seemingly impossible odds. They have no weapons, little food, and it sure looks like the wolves have their number. 

And so, good-natured, caring soul that you are, not knowing that a terribly disappointing, poor excuse of a finale awaits, you invest in their plight. While only Neeson's character, the alpha male anguished by life's misgivings and regrets, earns our full interest, an albeit familiar but engaging chemistry is established among the group. Some are just goners.

Distinguished from the ragtag motleys, fringe sorts who perceive life in the outreaches as their answer to the French Foreign Legion, Dallas Roberts' Hendrick seems a regular enough gu ... you know, family man. The same goes for Talget, played by Dermot Mulroney. But Ben Bray's Hernandez proves there's always at least one troublemaker. 

A couple of others are cause for consternation, but are a mere rehearsal for the big, lupine confrontation. They're out there. Just peering from the dark, only their eyes visible, we sense their size, ferocity and pitiless resolve. An expert in their ways, Ottway outlines what measures must be taken if they are to outwit their inbred survival instinct. 

The chase is on pell-mell, a decidedly non-stop affair through the frozen wilds that rarely decelerates long enough to let you gather your thoughts. The slightest comedy relief, usually in the form of gallows humor, is treasured. We are out of breath, the wolves at our heels. Then comes our first butchering. Reality looms. Oh, Mommy, help!


Threading through the horrors of sheer survival, the subject of a greater power enters the dialogue. Half believe, half don't, and in their disparity lies a chance to bond and learn tolerance, no matter how short-lived. In Gunga Din's India, we'd have our ears perked for bagpipes. For now, no bagpipes, and no helicopters ... only the angry snarl of wolves. 

If it is the director's aim to impress what a slim line exists between life and death, he is unbearably successful. But in accord with Woody Allen, who said "I'm not afraid of death; I just don't want to be there when it happens," I found "The Grey" more wearing than profound. Two hours in the shadow of Damocles' sword is hardly entertaining. 

Call me crazy. I'm just a film critic. But if Carnahan wanted to tell us something really reflective about survival, the cruel balance of nature and where we Homo sapiens fit into Darwin's deductions, he might have also told the wolves' side of the story, taken us into their lair, given us a look at their sociology. Whoa ... I'm not saying take their side. 

But as it stands, through some OK special effects that make the wolves seem as big as the toothy dude who dined on Red Riding Hood's dear old granny, this is a monster movie, and not the fully dimensional treatise on survival of the fittest it might have been. Still, despite its disconsolate madness, like a nightmare it leaves a lasting impression. 

It pushes buttons. And because its often gratuitous nature is nonetheless interspersed with some rather soulful and even intellectual insights about human strength and frailty, it can sweep you up in its doom and gloom. Further ameliorating the film’s unremitting, take-no-prisoners attitude, a mystery concerning Ottway's own demons has its curiosity.

Pun shamefully intended, whether or not to see this biting thriller is truly a matter of taste. So unless you really need a feature length reminder not to survive a plane crash where carnivorous species reside, or are simply willing to accept it for the flesh-ripping frightfest it is, surely you can find something less grisly to gnaw on than "The Grey."

"The Grey," rated R, is an Open Road Films release directed by Joe Carnahan and stars Liam Neeson, Ben Bray and Dallas Roberts. Running time: 117 minutes 
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Lanesborough Town Election Sees Expanded Select Board

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The Select Board will now have five people serving with the addition of two more board members elected on Tuesday. 

Juli Baker, Jeffery Walters and incumbent Michael Murphy took the three seats up for election in a five-way race, winning a three-year, two-year and one-year seat respectively based on the number of votes received. Out of the running were Scott Graves and Christian Halley.

Out of the more than 2,600 registered voters, 328 cast ballots Tuesday in the annual town election, or about a 12 percent turnout. 

The current board consists of Chair Deborah Maynard, Jason Breault, and Murphy. The new board was voted to have five members back in 2024 at the annual town meeting after resident Kristen Tool filed a citizens petition to expand it. The home-rule petition was sent to the Legislature and was approved late last year.

Murphy was running for a third term. He said he is not done with his work on the board and wants to see more projects done like the mall. He was voted back on with 168 votes for a one-year term.

"I feel like I've put in a good six years, but I do feel like there's a couple things that I'd like to see through that are still, you know, somewhere either on the front burner or the back burner," he said. "I'll talk about the mall, I'd love to play a role in seeing how that plays out. What's moved to the back burner after being on the front burner for a couple years is the need for a new police station. I still believe there's a need for that."

He is proud to be a part of the board that will expand its members and to have helped the town have a better atmosphere and attitude toward its residents.

"My proudest accomplishment is getting a better home for our Police Department, one that they need very well," Murphy said. "Some of the things that surprised me a little bit, but that I think I had an impact on, is improving the atmosphere within the Town Hall building. I think that's the best way to put it. There was a time, and I heard from many, many people in the community when I ran that I was surprised to hear how they didn't feel welcomed, they didn't feel comfortable, and I think that that attitude and that atmosphere has changed, and I've had something to do that."

Baker won the three-year term with 258 votes. Baker has been in Lanesborough since 2021 and has been participating on the Finance Committee, which she will now leave to be on the Select Board.

She ran because she felt she could help with her experience on many other boards and her ability to be a leader and see both sides of every story.

"I've had a lot of input into other groups like the planning board and the zoning board, and a lot of the issues that have been happening in town, and I feel like I have a very level head about very contentious issues, I look at all sides of every issue and cut through the emotions and get to the bottom of what the issue is and what's best for Lanesborough," she said.

Key issues she plans to address include managing tax increases that she has done with the finance board, addressing the short-term rental bylaw, and resolving the stalemate over the mall property to find the best way to get real value from the property.

Walters took the two-year term with 215 votes. Walters has been a resident for 26 years and owns Snap-On Tools dealership. He said he looks forward to working with the board and says one of the key issues he has heard is the taxes and wants to help maintain the residents taxes. He said he has been talking about running for about eight years and the bigger board helped push him to put his name on the ballot.

"I said I would like to run for a selectman. We're going to a five person select board, so I thought it'd be a good time. Being a small business owner, I feel I have something to contribute to add to the people that we have already in the Select Board," he said.

Graves said he wanted to be on the board to help others in the community feel welcome as he did not when he first came.

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