In
“The River,” a raging fire near the cave as driven animals far away. Hunting is bad, and there is a real chance
the family will starve. At one meal in the family cave, Mara (Naomi Pollack)
goes without eating so that her children, Ree (Janelle Pransky) and Tor
(Charles Morteo) can eat.
Bok
(Bill Ewing) returns from a several day hunt and reports that he saw game near
a big body of river. It is a long hike
to reach that river, but Korg makes a difficult decision. The family abandons the cave and makes the
multi-day trek to the river, which Korg calls “the wide water.”
When
Korg nearly drowns attempting to cross the river and catch a deer, Mara
declares that “the water is evil.” Korg,
however, thinks otherwise. As the days
pass and the family starves, he begins devising a method of passage on the
river: a makeshift raft…
In
“The River,” Korg and his family face the possibility of starvation, and such
danger leads them to a new discovery: how to traverse a river. Intriguingly, the story also contends with superstition.
Mara is a compassionate character who loves
her children, but she is also the most fearful and superstitious individual in the
family. She refuses to step aboard Korg’s raft, and is nearly left behind on the river
bank because she can’t control her fear (or belief that the water is alive…and
angry).
Therefore, it’s
a tough moment when Korg must choose between his family’s survival and staying
with Mara, his wife. Ultimately, he decides to leave, knowing that the children
must eat...or die. At the last minute, Mara comes
too, but it is not an easy moment, for certain.
It does, however, play as realistic…and difficult.
Just
as Korg drew inspiration from a spider in “The Web,” so does he here draw
inspiration from nature, from a bird, specifically. He sees a bird standing on
a log in the river, and realizes that a log can also carry him and his family
across the river; where food (in the form of a deer) awaits.
“The
River” features all the qualities I appreciate in Korg episodes. It features a
new location (a river, in this case), a difficult dilemma for the family, and
an example of how a religious belief system can hold somebody back, even with
survival on the line.
Next
week, the sixteenth and final episode of the series: “Ree and the Wolf.”
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