Hands That Bind

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Hands That Bind
Directed byKyle Armstrong
Written byKyle Armstrong
Produced byBlake McWilliam
StarringPaul Sparks
Landon Liboiron
Nicholas Campbell
Susan Kent
CinematographyMike McLaughlin
Edited byMarc Boucrot
Music byJim O'Rourke
Production
company
Hired Hands Productions
Distributed byMongrel Media
Dark Sky Films
Release date
  • September 10, 2021 (2021-09-10) (CIFF)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Hands That Bind is a Canadian drama film, directed by Kyle Armstrong and released in 2021.[1] The film stars Paul Sparks as Andy Hollis, a man who has been working as a farmhand for farmer Mac Longridge (Nicholas Campbell) with an eye to eventually taking over the farm when Mac retires, but whose plans are jeopardized when Mac's estranged son Dirk (Landon Liboiron), who had never wanted anything to do with the farm, returns and tries to get Andy fired.[2]

The cast also includes Susan Kent as Andy's wife Susan and Bruce Dern as neighbour farmer Hank, as well as Will Oldham, Scott Olynek, Brendan Hunter, Geordie Cheeseman, John Warkentin, Robert Nogier, Ray Pearson, Linnea Mullen, Katrina Beatty, Cristina Menz, Brian Copping, Lianna Makuch and Ian Leung in supporting roles.

Distribution

The film premiered at the 2021 Calgary International Film Festival,[1] before going into commercial release in 2023.[2]

Its score, composed by Jim O'Rourke, was released as an album in 2023 shortly before the film's commercial release.[3]

Critical response

For Original Cin, Chris Knight wrote that "There are no ready answers, although the film leaves itself open to multiple interpretations. I can imagine an entire thesis built around it being a commentary on colonialism - in the opening scene, Andy finds an ancient arrowhead and then throws it away - but one could also watch the film without ever giving that reading a second thought. You could also lean into the way the movie offers several arguably dated suggestions for what it means to be a real man - provider, husband, father, worker, handyman and, in the case of Dirk, chauvinist. 'Hold my beer while I dance with your wife,' he instructs Andy in the town bar one night, before picking a fight with another guy and getting himself tossed out on his ass."[4]

Anne T. Donahue of The Globe and Mail wrote that "cerebral and slow-burning, the film delves into the mythos surrounding what makes a man while tackling the binary of 'us' versus 'them.' Sparks’s understated albeit commanding turn as the strong, silent Andy works in tandem alongside Armstrong’s yellowed sceneries and desolate landscapes."[2]

Awards

Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Cinematography at the 12th Canadian Screen Awards in 2024.[5]

John Blerot won the

Rosie Award for Best Overall Sound (Scripted Over 30 Minutes) in 2022, and was a CSA nominee for Best Sound Editing in 2024.[5]

References

External links