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Where the Crawdads Sing Blu-ray review: Dir. Olivia Newman

Anyone who has been a fan of a novel which receives its own film adaptation will know that excited feeling you get when you take their seat for your first screening. Will it live up to your expectations of the book? Opening on Chase Andrews’ (Harris Dickinson) dead body lying waterlogged and muddy, we’re thrown into the most tantalizing criminal trial 1960s North Carolina town Barkley Cove has ever seen – starring prime suspect Catherine ‘Kya’ Danielle Clark aka the Marsh Girl (Daisy Edgar-Jones).

Now, we travel back in time to Kya’s early life, surviving her abusive, alcoholic father after her mother and siblings leave their shack, one by one, never to return. Eventually, he abandons her too, and young Kya is left to struggle on alone, with only the eyes of local shop keeper Jumpin’ (Sterling Macer Jr.) and wife Mabel (Michael Hyatt) watching over her.

As the years pass, Kya learns to survive on the support of her surroundings, truly earning her nickname given to her by townspeople. Collecting oysters to sell to Jumpin’; navigating the murky waters using her family’s old motorboat; decorating her shack with feathers, shells and other trinkets collected on her adventures. And she seems content – until Tate Walker (Taylor John Smith) enters her life, and becomes her whole world….

So, while Edgar-Jones is a great fit for Kya, with her doe eyes and flowing locks, the rest of the film feels too… perfect? Adult Kya is never shown to look dirty and unkempt – this is the Marsh Girl, who lives in a literal swamp. And it’s not just Kya but her environment, too. The marsh looks too polished, too much like a potential holiday destination for wealthy couples looking to get away from the daily grind.

And while the novel’s story does revolve around Kya’s love triangle, this becomes the main focus of the film’s narrative, so much so I felt like I was watching an updated version of The Notebook at one point. Lots of close-ups of Kya kissing either Tate or Chase, steamy romps on a mattress, on a forest floor, by the sea. Granted, Dickinson and Smith are strong leading men, but it all felt a little too cheesy compared to what I know of Owens’ writing.

One highlight I will take away from the adaptation is the spot-on portrayal of Jumpin’ and Mabel. If there are any two people you would want looking after you as a child, it would be them, and Macer Jr. and Hyatt embody their warm, caring personalities so well.

Where the Crawdads Sing should make any romantic drama enthusiast happy but it lacks that gritty, dark, twisted surroundings of Kya, reflecting her life back at her, that Owens nails in the book.

Extras on the Blu-ray include featurette ‘Adapting a Phenomenon’, the smart song ‘Carolina’ lyric video by Taylor Swift, Creating the World and Women in Focus featurettes, plus some deleted scenes.

Where the Crawdads Sing is out on Blu-ray and DVD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment: https://amzn.to/3gyWVIi

You can also try to win a copy on Blu-ray by clicking here!

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