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The Revenant-Bluray(Google Drive)
The Revenant is a 2015 American survival western film directed, co-produced and co-written by Alejandro G. Iñárritu. The screenplay by Iñárritu and Mark L. Smith is based in part on Michael Punke's novel of the same name, inspired by the experiences of frontiersman Hugh Glass in 1823, in what is now Montana and South Dakota. It stars Leonardo DiCaprio as Glass, and co-starsTom Hardy, Domhnall Gleeson and Will Poulter. The film follows Glass's quest for revenge after one of his men betrays him, kills his son, and leaves the severely wounded Glass behind.
Plot
In 1823, Hugh Glass acts as a guide for Captain Andrew Henry’s party of trappers through unorganized U.S. territory (later the Dakotas). While he and his half-Pawnee son Hawk are hunting, the rest of the company is ambushed by a hostile Arikara war party, with the survivors being forced to abandon the beaver pelts they’d collected.
The survivors regroup downriver, fearing they are still being pursued. The matter is further complicated when Glass, while scouting, stumbles across a mother grizzly bear and her cubs. Although he manages to kill the bear, Glass is left mauled and near death. With no immediate medical attention available, the belligerent trapper John Fitzgerald suggests to Henry that killing Glass would be a mercy. Henry agrees, but he is unable to pull the trigger. Instead, Henry offers money for anyone to stay behind with Glass in case he recovers or dies on his own. When the only volunteers are Hawk and the naive youth Jim Bridger, Fitzgerald eventually agrees to stay in order to recoup his losses from the abandoned pelts. Henry makes Fitzgerald promise that if Glass dies, he will give the man a proper burial.
After the other trappers leave, Fitzgerald waits until he’s alone with Glass. Seeing the wounded man as a lost cause, Fitzgerald attempts to smother him, but he is stopped by Hawk. When Hawk tries to call for help, a panicked Fitzgerald stabs the boy in front of his agonized father. Fitzgerald hurriedly hides Hawk’s body before Bridger returns to the camp. Unable to communicate due to his injuries, Glass can do nothing but watch. The next morning, Fitzgerald wakes Bridger and tells him that a party of Arikara are surrounding them, and left with no other recourse, they hastily drop Glass into a shallow grave and abandon him.
When Fitzgerald and Bridger meet up with Captain Henry at Fort Kiowa, Fitzgerald tells him that, despite their best efforts, they were unable to save Glass and that Hawk had gone missing. In gratitude of their service, Henry pays both men the promised cash reward, but the guilt-wracked Bridger refuses the money. Glass, meanwhile, refuses to die. He hauls himself from his shallow grave and, after mourning his son’s death for a while, slowly begins his arduous journey through the wilderness, first by crawling, then walking. He performs crude self-surgery to heal his wounds while attempting to elude the Arikara, who are still in pursuit. The Arikara chief, Elk Dog, is searching for his daughter, Powaqa, who was kidnapped by white men.
After narrowly escaping the Arikara again, Glass encounters a Pawnee refugee named Hikuc who warily allows the wounded man to share bison meat. The two men gradually form a bond. Hikuc treats Glass’s injuries with maggot therapy and builds him a sweat hut in an attempt to purge the infection. After a hallucinogenic experience, Glass awakens to discover his new friend has been hanged by a group of French traders camped nearby. When Glass spies on them, he discovers they are responsible for Powaqa’s abduction, and he manages to get the drop on a trapper as he rapes her. Powaqa castrates her rapist and flees while Glass steals a horse as the other Frenchmen open fire. The next morning, Glass is pursued by the Arikara and is driven over a cliff. His horse dies in the fall and an injured Glass must weather a winter storm by climbing into its carcass.
A desperate survivor of the French party staggers into Fort Kiowa, where he is questioned about the attack on his men. During the questioning, he reveals he is carrying his attacker’s canteen (which Bridger immediately recognizes as belonging to Glass). Reasoning that Hawk might have been the one to carry the canteen, Bridger and Henry gather a search party. Fitzgerald, knowing that Glass is the only person who could’ve been in possession of the flask and thus managed to survive his ordeal, empties the outpost’s payroll safe and flees before his crimes can be revealed. The search party finds an exhausted Glass, and an enraged Henry orders Bridger to be taken into custody. When the party returns to the fort, they find that Fitzgerald has fled.
After Glass vouches that Bridger was deceived into abandoning him, he and Henry set out in pursuit of Fitzgerald. When the two men split up to pick up signs of Fitzgerald's trail, Fitzgerald ambushes Henry and shoots him. Glass arrives on the scene to find Henry dead and Fitzgerald gone. Glass fashions a decoy by dressing Henry's corpse in his own coat and propping it on his horse while slinging his own body across the back of the companion pack-horse, in order to pose as the dead Henry. Fitzgerald takes the bait and shoots the decoy, but when he arrives to check on the body, he realizes his mistake just as Glass springs his trap. Glass pursues Fitzgerald to a river bank, where the two men confront each other in brutal, hand-to-hand combat. A victorious Glass is prepared to kill Fitzgerald but, in the end, decides to leave revenge up to fate. He pushes Fitzgerald into the river just as the Arikara war party shows up. Elk Dog, who has been reunited with his daughter, scalps and kills Fitzgerald. The Arikara then silently pass by Glass, sparing his life.
Heavily wounded and his quest for revenge at an end, Glass sees a hallucination of his deceased wife, and then turns towards the camera as the film fades to black.
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