An epic tale of three brothers and their father living in the remote wilderness of 1900s USA and how their lives are affected by nature, history, war, and love.
This movie contains 29 potentially triggering events.
Not sure why there’s “yes” votes here. No dogs die in the film. There’s no scenes showing any dogs dying nor is there even any mention of it. There are some scenes with dogs but they aren’t hurt or mistreated.
A character with PTSD is startled awake and pulls a knife on his girlfriend in bed. She is visibly scared. He does not harm her, coming to and putting the weapon down.
.The cow and barbed wire scene is horrendous, and is extra hard to watch due to the calf crying out in pain and gargling blood from the wire cutting at his throat.
A human provokes a sleeping bear. The bear slashes at the human, cutting his arm. Instead of leaving, he retaliates by stabbing the bear in the paw and severing a toe/claw. The bear is shown whimpering and limping away.
A wild stallion is captured and then shown being “broken.”
A calf is shown stuck in razor wire. A character tries to free the calf unsuccessfully and ends up shooting it to put it out if it’s misery.
Maybe? There is a very brief scene within a montage that seems to depict one of the characters being held down and tied up while screaming. It is unclear what is happening and is never addressed.
After finding out that her fiancé is planning to enlist and storming off upset, the primary love interest gets cozy with and almost kisses her fiancé’s brother, though they are walked in on before it can happen.
Susannah kills herself when she finds out Tristan wants her to move on.
Technically Tristan because he went into combat against an angry Grizzly with just a knife. He knew what would happen
There is not specific depiction or mention of miscarriage. A character notably wants kids and for an unnamed reason is not able to. She is shown to be emotional about it when interacting with other people’s children.
In the opening monologue, the narrator quotes a character as having said he moved over the mountains to “escape the madness.” This is repeated a few times.
There is quite a bit of blood and gore, including on-screen deaths by gunfire, explosion, and stabbing/throat-slitting, battlefields full of corpses, and scalping. After the death of his brother in battle, a character is shown cutting out his brothers heart (the removal from the body is obfuscated, though there is corresponding audio gore) and then later unwrapping the heart from cloth for ritual purposes, spreading the blood onto his own face.
There is a brief scene that depicts a dead zebra which has also had its heart cut out.
Later there are additional deaths by gunfire that are shown on screen with blood. Someone is impaled on a pitchfork.