Luma's is a decidedly limited life, for one thing: her days are spent being prodded from one metal pen to the next, occasionally being strapped into a vast industrial milking machine. Her calves - six, according to one onlooker - have their flanks branded with numbers, their ears tagged and, in the most distressing sequence, holes seared into their skulls for reasons withheld. As Luma was led into a separate area of the barn to nuzzle her offspring, the phrase "visiting hours" popped into my head - and, in its glum routine, Cow often resembles a prison movie, the kind of eyeopener filmmakers typically assemble to raise awareness of the conditions in which man pens others up. Arnold doesn't need to show any Kurt Zouma-like breaches of protocol - the farm workers we see are nice, surprisingly photogenic folks doing a job to the best of their abilities - because the stuff that makes you wince here has long been factored into the processes of commercial farming. Will Cow change the eating habits of a generation, as Bambi and Babe did before it? Unlikely, I'd say: if you're a vegetarian, it will confirm your choices, and if you like a burger every now and again, you'll again see exactly what you've always overlooked whenever you're peckish and passing a Wimpy. What the film has for sure is Arnold's nose for the dramatic - which immediately elevates Cow over Gunda's snuffling monotony - and her rare capacity to foster subjectivity and empathy. There's a brilliant sequence that shows Luma standing in a field (as if on overnight release) and looking up towards the tail lights of a plane passing over her. Pigs might, but do cows have any concept of what it is to fly? It helps that Luma is possessed of vast, reflective black eyes: you can read almost anything you like into them. But it looked to me as though these cows were as bugged by bluebottles as we are, and are as tentative crossing a muddy pasture as you and I would be. I'm sure that, like any other creature, they could do without the holes in their head - but, then again, would a cow necessarily be any happier sat on the sofa, puzzling over the day's Wordle? I'm still not sure they would; I'm not sure we're happy doing that, half the time. The quiet achievement of Arnold's film is that it at least sets us to wonder.
Cow is now streaming via MUBI.
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