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The Unknown Country

2023 | 85m | English

(952 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 0.3 (history)

Details

A grieving woman embarks on an unexpected road trip as she grapples with the pain of her recent loss and seeks to understand her place in the world.
Release Date: Jul 28, 2023
Director: Morrisa Maltz
Writer: Vanara Taing, Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux, Morrisa Maltz, Lily Gladstone
Genres: Drama
Keywords indigenous, usa–mexico border, road trip, grief, neorealism, woman director, american midwest, independent film
Production Companies Cold Iron Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $65,683
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 30, 2025
Entered: May 01, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Job
Vanara Taing Editor, Screenplay
Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux Screenplay
Andrew Hajek Director of Photography
Samuel Jones Original Music Composer
Alexis Marsh Original Music Composer
Jeff Brannon Sound Mixer
Liz Marston Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Codi Putman Production Sound Mixer
Natalie Heitkamp Costume Design
Morrisa Maltz Director, Screenplay
Lily Gladstone Screenplay
Name Title
Laura Heberton Producer
Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux Producer
Katherine Harper Producer
Vanara Taing Producer
Tommy Heitkamp Producer
Rachel Crouch Executive Producer
Veronica Nickel Executive Producer
Natalie Whalen Executive Producer
Gill Holland Executive Producer
Matthew Mills Executive Producer
Steve Malouf Executive Producer
Miranda Bailey Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Brent_Marchant
6.0

In telling a story with surreal and/or other-worldly aspects, there’s a big difference between “mystical” and “mystifying,” and that’s where this second feature from writer-director Morissa Maltz misses the mark. This dreamlike road trip tale of a Native American woman (Lily Gladstone) recovering fr ... om the loss of her beloved grandmother follows her on a personal vision quest of sorts across the Midwest and Southern Great Plains. She leaves her home in Minneapolis and travels first to South Dakota to attend her cousin’s wedding and to reconnect with her family and culture, especially the impact of ancestors and spirit guides in everyday life. From there she drives to Texas to see if she can connect with the legacy of her grandmother in the state’s Big Bend region, a favored place of her late nana. In between, she encounters an array of individuals and events that strengthen (but don’t always explain) her bond to a heritage she seems to have left behind some time ago. At first glance, this narrative would seem to have the makings of an enlightening and inspiring journey of self-discovery, and that’s true to a certain extent. However, these themes are never fleshed out as fully as they could have been. While it’s understandable how such a story might have a certain intrinsic enigmatic quality about it, it’s so subdued as to essentially become cryptic, even puzzling. The narrative here is said to be based on the filmmaker’s own experiences, yet, regrettably, that may be the problem – the director is too close to the material to effectively convey what she’s trying to say to outsiders. A framework for the aforementioned themes would appear to be in place, but the handling of many sequences can be so vague that audiences may have difficulty assessing what the filmmaker is trying to convey, let alone even what’s transpiring. This is further hampered by a lack of the protagonist’s character development, which offers little in the way of back story and scant clarity on what she’s seeking to accomplish through this undertaking. Consequently, the film relies on an array of undefined reaction shots, combined with narrated anecdotes from other characters and a wealth of gorgeous landscape shots that beautifully depict the region’s wide open spaces but add little substance, suggesting that they may have been incorporated to pad an already-short 1:25:00 runtime. The overall style here is thus reminiscent of the movies of Terrence Malick and Chloé Zhao (particularly “Nomadland” (2020)), auteurs whose works are themselves often challenging to follow but are certainly a cut above what’s on offer here. Unfortunately, “The Unknown Country” represents a missed opportunity to provide valuable insight into the life of an individual and the ways of a culture that could have been uplifting for others faced with similar circumstances. Instead, though, it comes across more like a collection of disjointed images and underdeveloped story threads that had potential but that never materialized as effectively as they might have been.

Feb 27, 2024