Kate Mara and friend in "Megan Leavey." Credit: PHOTO COURTESY BLEECKER STREET

“Blackfish” director Gabriela Cowperthwaite shifts capably
from documentary to narrative filmmaking with a different (and decidedly more
uplifting) tale of human and animal relations in “Megan Leavey.”
The film focuses on the real-life story of Leavey (a
wonderful Kate Mara), a wayward 20-something who finds redemption through the
bond she forms with a bomb-sniffing military combat dog.

As the film
opens, Megan is adrift, still reeling from the death of her best friend and
suffering under a strained relationship with her mother (Edie Falco) and
stepdad (Will Patton). She barely sees her birth father (Bradley Whitford), and once she’s fired from her dead-end job,
there’s little attaching Megan to her small town home. So Megan impulsively enlists
in the Marines and heads toward a military base in the hopes of finding some
sort of purpose.

But Megan’s
path still isn’t smooth, and it’s not until she meets Rex, a German Shepherd
member of the Military Police K9 Unit, that things begin to fall into place.
Megan finds a calling as we follow her and Rex through training and deployment
to Iraq, where they make a formidable team until an injury separates them. As
Megan struggles to re-enter society after returning home, she fights to be reunited
with her canine companion.

There’s
plenty of opportunity for this material to turn saccharine, and though the film
isn’t without its predictable patches, Cowperthwaite’s restraint and sure hand
behind the camera allow the story’s genuine emotion to shine through.

“Megan Leavey”

(PG-13), Directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite

Opens Friday, June 9

Film critic for CITY Newspaper, writer, iced coffee addict, and dinosaur enthusiast.