
world by storm with a string of acclaimed short films
and her stirring debut feature, 1999's Ratcatcher, Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay confounded expectations with her second and perhaps most unjustly overlooked film. Based on a 1995 novel by Alan Warner and featuring one of the most epic soundtracks of its era, Morvern Callar is a challenging and often slippery character study examining self identity and dislocation, anchored by a remarkable central performance by Samantha Morton in between her two Oscar-nominated performances (for Sweet and Lowdown and In America).
Lanna (McDermott), who works with her at a supermarket. Morvern and Lanna end up taking a trip to Spain where their paths begin to diverge both physically and
emotionally.
presentation that retains the original grainy but vibrant texture of the film (thanks to a 2K scan from the 35mm interpositive)
and features an evocative DTS-HD MA 5.1 track (with optional English subtitles) that makes spacious use of the songs in particular. A new commentary by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and Josh Nelson starts off making a case for Ramsay on the basis of her four films while also touching on differences from the novel, the role of music in the film, its slight connections to genre films (particularly the ultimate fate of the dead boyfriend), and the role of gender dynamics. The Chris O'Neill video essay "Somewhere Beautiful" (7m29s) takes a surprising approach by eschewing narration here (apart from a brief spoken intro from the novel), appropriately using subtitles over moody imagery and music from the film to dissect its way of communicating to the viewer without the narration present in the book. Also included are the U.S. and U.K. trailers, plus an insert booklet featuring an essay by K.J. Relth-Miller about the film's correlative between female subjectivity and grief, plus a Margaret Barton-Fumo study of the songs in the film including the Warp Records catalog.