Director Rod Blackhurst’s stark crime flick Blood for Dust is nothing new under the sun — or, more accurately, the frigid sun of Wyoming and Montana, where the story takes place. But with an array of burnished, lived-in performances from a strong cast and an underlying level of suspense punctuated by a few gnarly action scenes, it’s certainly a watchable little genre venture that could find an audience, especially on streaming.
Fargo (both the movie and the TV series) immediately comes to mind in this early 90s-set thriller that feels very much like a product of the early 90s, with lots of caustic dialogue and outbursts of gory violence against a backdrop of Western American desolation. Following a forlorn salesman, Cliff (Scoot McNairy), who gets roped into illegal drug trafficking by his badass former colleague, Ricky (Kit Harington), it heads to mostly familiar places, but manages to do so in a way that makes us want to stick around for the ride.
Blood for Dust
The Bottom Line
Well-executed without breaking new ground.
A bleak opening has a guy blowing his brains out in his tiny corporate office, where he was supposed to meet with Cliff and Ricky after hours. We flash-forward to a year and half later, with Cliff now peddling defibrillators to mid-sized businesses around the West, striving and mostly failing to make ends meet. As indicated in any good modern film noir guidebook, he eventually winds up alone at a strip club, where he crosses paths with Ricky, who invites him into a smuggling ring led by a nasty local kingpin (an unleashed Josh Lucas).
You don’t have to be a fan of Fargo or Blood Simple or even A Simple Plan to figure out that things will not go smoothly for Cliff, who’s tasked with driving a station wagon filled with either coke or heroin up Montana’s I-90 highway. He’s accompanied by a creepy, silent henchman (Ethan Suplee) who keeps watch on him in unsettling ways, while being pursued by a suspicious pickup truck that appears in all the places it shouldn’t.
There’s no need to further reveal the plot — credited to Blackhurst and David Ebeltoft, with a script by the latter — which has a few good twists but also feels predictable, especially in the last act. What makes Blood for Dust work is the sleek filmmaking, as well as McNairy’s sad and slippery portrayal of a down-and-out nobody who decides crime is the only thing that pays.
Blackhurst, who directed true crime documentaries on both Amanda Knox and John Wayne Gacy, has a keen eye for depicting the gloomy details of Cliff’s sad-sack life — the faceless motels he stays in while peddling medical supplies on the road or the people he can’t convince to help him out, including a cruel cattle auctioneer compellingly played by Stephen Dorff.
Collectively, these details paint a dour portrait of Western rural malaise — and, unlike the films of the Coens, one that contains no humor whatsoever. Harington does bring some levity to the proceedings early on, speaking with an accent so marked by rugged Americana it’s as if his character subsisted entirely on beef jerky. Soon enough, we realize that Ricky, with all his tough guy charms, is not necessarily going to give Cliff much of a hand, and things only spiral further from there.
Handsomely lensed by Justin Derry (Bruiser), who makes the frosted landscapes feel both monumental and lonesome, the independent feature makes the most of its modest budget, which was raised by a credit-block-busting 28 producers and executive producers. Such is what it takes to finance these kinds of small-scale genre pictures in the U.S. today, and while Blood for Dust doesn’t break any new ground in its domain, it should give the talented Blackhurst enough mileage to keep on making them.
Full credits
Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Spotlight Narrative)
Production companies: The Avenue, R.U. Robot Studios, Highland Film Group, Witchcraft Motion Picture Company, Nickel City Pictures, Short Porch Pictures, Bondit Media Capital, Good Wizard Productions, Jaid7 Pictures, Studio 507
Cast: Scoot McNairy, Kit Harington, Josh Lucas, Ethan Suplee, Stephen Dorff, Nora Zehetner, Amber Rose Mason
Director: Rod Blackhurst
Screenwriter: David Ebeltoft, story by David Ebeltoft, Rod Blackhurst
Producers: Nathan Klingher, Mark Fasano, Noah Lang, Peter Jakl, Bernard Kira, Bobby Campbell, Arun Kumar, Ryan Winterstern, Ari Novak
Executive producers: Arianne Fraser, Delphine Perrier, Henry Wintersern, Martin J. Barab, JJ Caruth, Paul W. Hazen, David Gendron, Viviana Zarragoitia, Matthew Helderman, Luke Taylor, Grady Craig, Tyler Gould, David Ebeltoft, Rod Blackhurst, Anthony Standberry, Ford Corbett, Greg Friedman, Angel Campbell, Matthew Alex Goldberg
Director of photography: Justin Derry
Production designer: Rob Ebeltoft
Costume designer: Olivia Perdoch
Editor: Justin Oakey
Composer: Nick Bohun
Sales: Highland Film Group
1 hour 44 minutes