Five women participate in a hiking retreat but only four come out the other side. Federal agents Aaron Falk and Carmen Cooper head into the mountains hoping to find their informant still ali... Read allFive women participate in a hiking retreat but only four come out the other side. Federal agents Aaron Falk and Carmen Cooper head into the mountains hoping to find their informant still alive.Five women participate in a hiking retreat but only four come out the other side. Federal agents Aaron Falk and Carmen Cooper head into the mountains hoping to find their informant still alive.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 12 nominations total
Matilda May Pawsey
- Rebecca
- (as Matilda Pawsey)
Sam Arnold
- Cop
- (uncredited)
Brendan Green
- Cop
- (uncredited)
Samantha Jones
- Corporate Woman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I found this movie to be really well done. The music, acting, writing, plot and overall STYLE is terrific.
There is a lot going on - several underlying plots and backstories. I won't spoil anything for you, but I'll give you a leg up on the backstory:
Alice works for a powerful law firm or accounting firm (or something) that launders money for powerful international criminals.
Her daughter had bullied another girl at their exclusive prep school, and the school had threatened to kick the girl out. Alice then stole money from her work and "donated" it to the school in order to keep her daughter from getting kicked out.
Eric Bana is a policeman who focuses on financial crimes, and he had caught Alice stealing the money. So now, Alice is an informant for Bana, and if Alice stops cooperating, Bana will make sure everybody finds out about her theft and she'll either go to jail or get killed by the crooked people she works for.
Then, Alice goes on a team-building hiking/camping trip with 4 other people she works for, and she disappears.
That's where the movie starts.
My wife and I just picked it sort of at random out of the gigantic number of movies on all of our streaming services, but we were very pleasantly surprised.
Every once in a while you just stumble upon a gem, and this definitely qualifies.
There is a lot going on - several underlying plots and backstories. I won't spoil anything for you, but I'll give you a leg up on the backstory:
Alice works for a powerful law firm or accounting firm (or something) that launders money for powerful international criminals.
Her daughter had bullied another girl at their exclusive prep school, and the school had threatened to kick the girl out. Alice then stole money from her work and "donated" it to the school in order to keep her daughter from getting kicked out.
Eric Bana is a policeman who focuses on financial crimes, and he had caught Alice stealing the money. So now, Alice is an informant for Bana, and if Alice stops cooperating, Bana will make sure everybody finds out about her theft and she'll either go to jail or get killed by the crooked people she works for.
Then, Alice goes on a team-building hiking/camping trip with 4 other people she works for, and she disappears.
That's where the movie starts.
My wife and I just picked it sort of at random out of the gigantic number of movies on all of our streaming services, but we were very pleasantly surprised.
Every once in a while you just stumble upon a gem, and this definitely qualifies.
I have read 'The Dry' and 'Force of Nature' and now have seen both movies.
I believe 'Force of Nature' is a stand alone movie. The negative reviews nearly put me off seeing this one. You don't need to understand anything about 'The Dry' to understand that Aaron Falk is part of the federal police.
It was clever when going back 30 odd years, that the quality of the film was grainy.
The cinematography is beautiful and whilst some of the writing is a bit clunky, overall it's a movie worth seeing on the big screen. I enjoyed the performances by Eric Bana and Anna Torv who always deliver.
It certainly makes you aware of how easily you can get lost in bush.
I believe 'Force of Nature' is a stand alone movie. The negative reviews nearly put me off seeing this one. You don't need to understand anything about 'The Dry' to understand that Aaron Falk is part of the federal police.
It was clever when going back 30 odd years, that the quality of the film was grainy.
The cinematography is beautiful and whilst some of the writing is a bit clunky, overall it's a movie worth seeing on the big screen. I enjoyed the performances by Eric Bana and Anna Torv who always deliver.
It certainly makes you aware of how easily you can get lost in bush.
I saw it by accident: its first week.
A noble idea got destroyed by poor scripting and politically-correct casting. Its big merit was the filming, Australian bush landscapes, but even those scenes had to be moody dull. There was far too much intertwining of timelines and unexplained lines. What body was found? Whose son found the body found by someone else. The lone wolf federal investigator was a Hollywood cliche, as were the classic eyeball confrontation scenes with the notional hero vs the police chief.
What stood out? Debra LF as Jill: an incongruous character in the plot, and with a mismatched husband, but still a great performance.
Do what I did: see it at a theatre which lets you brin in wine in a glass.
A noble idea got destroyed by poor scripting and politically-correct casting. Its big merit was the filming, Australian bush landscapes, but even those scenes had to be moody dull. There was far too much intertwining of timelines and unexplained lines. What body was found? Whose son found the body found by someone else. The lone wolf federal investigator was a Hollywood cliche, as were the classic eyeball confrontation scenes with the notional hero vs the police chief.
What stood out? Debra LF as Jill: an incongruous character in the plot, and with a mismatched husband, but still a great performance.
Do what I did: see it at a theatre which lets you brin in wine in a glass.
I rather liked The Dry, although I didn't rate it (or the book on which it was based) as much as most Australians, so I had quite high hopes for this one.
Alas, they were dashed almost as soon as the film began. The overblown, portentous music was set my Dud Alert quivering, and it was all downhill from there. Ridiculously over complicated plot with about four separate strand running at once, none of which were really resolved satisfactorily, and a couple of them not at all. I pitied the actors who had to deliver what must be some of the clunkiest lines of dialogue ever written, and perhaps the poor quality of the screenplay explains why the performances were so uniformly poor; even Eric Bana, who's an excellent actor, is terrible in this.
Just don't bother. There are far better ways to spend your time.
Alas, they were dashed almost as soon as the film began. The overblown, portentous music was set my Dud Alert quivering, and it was all downhill from there. Ridiculously over complicated plot with about four separate strand running at once, none of which were really resolved satisfactorily, and a couple of them not at all. I pitied the actors who had to deliver what must be some of the clunkiest lines of dialogue ever written, and perhaps the poor quality of the screenplay explains why the performances were so uniformly poor; even Eric Bana, who's an excellent actor, is terrible in this.
Just don't bother. There are far better ways to spend your time.
Who doesn't love a good mystery/thriller movie?
Personally I'm a big fan and have watch lists for this very genre on various streaming services to last me till the Zombie Apocalypse is over and we can all crawl out of our bunkers again and drive Mad Max style into the dusty distance.
It's kind of ironic that the sequel to "The Dry" is called "Force Of Nature: The Dry 2" when it's set in a wet forest and the biggest hindrance to a search and recovery operation is a huge storm cell.
As one of the production companies involved in the making of this project "Made Up Stories" likes to say, "Tell Me A Story".
Okay, Five women head out on a remote hiking retreat but only four return, each telling a different story.
The whistle blower/insider is missing and if they don't find her quickly, presumed dead!
There are more suspects than children at a Wiggles concert.
Detective Aaron Falk (Eric Bana: affectionately known as Poida by most Aussies) must find out what really happened before time runs out and the rains come ma.
Eric reprises his role to star alongside fresh characters in "Force of Nature" played by Anna Torv ("Newsreaders"), Deborah-Lee Furness, Jacqueline McKenzie, Richard Roxburgh and others.
Robert Connolly is back in his Director Chair and although this is not truly a sequel with no connection to the original it is the second chapter from a series of books authored by Jane Harper (who must be laughing all the way to the bank) her follow up novel to the original story "The Dry".
Honestly they should have dropped "Dry" from the title, but at least people remember that wonderful film that punched above its weight.
Filming for this movie traveled away from rural Victoria into rugged, dangerous Dandenong Ranges National Park (The Basin) in Australia in 2022, but its release was delayed by 5 months due to the SAG-AFTRA strike.
Unfortunately this film is not the force of nature I was hoping for after the massive success with both critics and movie goers of "The Dry".
I even burst out laughing during what was meant to be a climatic serious waterfall scene...I know I'm a sick puppy...tell my therapist.
"Force of Nature" is hobbled by a pedestrian, convoluted plot with 3 layers that gets too busy with messy results, but it does get some brownie points for beautiful cinematography, editing & haunting soundtrack.
The acting felt dialled in/paint by numbers with certain people (I'm looking at you McKenzie, who is normally great) and the script/screenplay just got lost in translation and felt wooden and predictable.
Don't even get me started on Falks backstory and history with this mountain range that tried to pull at the heart strings, but lacked the mystery of the original.
As for the "serial killer" subplot it just fizzled and fell flat like a bottle of champagne left uncorked overnight.
"Force Of Nature: The Dry 2" tried to be all "Picnic At Hanging Rock" in a 21st century woke women's retreat way and missed the mark to get lost in the forest for the trees.
Personally I'm a big fan and have watch lists for this very genre on various streaming services to last me till the Zombie Apocalypse is over and we can all crawl out of our bunkers again and drive Mad Max style into the dusty distance.
It's kind of ironic that the sequel to "The Dry" is called "Force Of Nature: The Dry 2" when it's set in a wet forest and the biggest hindrance to a search and recovery operation is a huge storm cell.
As one of the production companies involved in the making of this project "Made Up Stories" likes to say, "Tell Me A Story".
Okay, Five women head out on a remote hiking retreat but only four return, each telling a different story.
The whistle blower/insider is missing and if they don't find her quickly, presumed dead!
There are more suspects than children at a Wiggles concert.
Detective Aaron Falk (Eric Bana: affectionately known as Poida by most Aussies) must find out what really happened before time runs out and the rains come ma.
Eric reprises his role to star alongside fresh characters in "Force of Nature" played by Anna Torv ("Newsreaders"), Deborah-Lee Furness, Jacqueline McKenzie, Richard Roxburgh and others.
Robert Connolly is back in his Director Chair and although this is not truly a sequel with no connection to the original it is the second chapter from a series of books authored by Jane Harper (who must be laughing all the way to the bank) her follow up novel to the original story "The Dry".
Honestly they should have dropped "Dry" from the title, but at least people remember that wonderful film that punched above its weight.
Filming for this movie traveled away from rural Victoria into rugged, dangerous Dandenong Ranges National Park (The Basin) in Australia in 2022, but its release was delayed by 5 months due to the SAG-AFTRA strike.
Unfortunately this film is not the force of nature I was hoping for after the massive success with both critics and movie goers of "The Dry".
I even burst out laughing during what was meant to be a climatic serious waterfall scene...I know I'm a sick puppy...tell my therapist.
"Force of Nature" is hobbled by a pedestrian, convoluted plot with 3 layers that gets too busy with messy results, but it does get some brownie points for beautiful cinematography, editing & haunting soundtrack.
The acting felt dialled in/paint by numbers with certain people (I'm looking at you McKenzie, who is normally great) and the script/screenplay just got lost in translation and felt wooden and predictable.
Don't even get me started on Falks backstory and history with this mountain range that tried to pull at the heart strings, but lacked the mystery of the original.
As for the "serial killer" subplot it just fizzled and fell flat like a bottle of champagne left uncorked overnight.
"Force Of Nature: The Dry 2" tried to be all "Picnic At Hanging Rock" in a 21st century woke women's retreat way and missed the mark to get lost in the forest for the trees.
Did you know
- TriviaMost of the people at the search staging area were actual Victoria State Emergency Service volunteers who assist police with real missing person searches.
- GoofsAn Australian character played by an Australian actor uses the word "cell phone", which is uniquely American, rather than "mobile (phone)"
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Project: Episode dated 23 January 2024 (2024)
- How long is Force of Nature: The Dry 2?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Dry 2: La fuerza de la naturaleza
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $58,690
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $36,609
- May 12, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $5,786,313
- Runtime
- 2h(120 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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