Category Archives: Western

The Sisters Brothers (2018)

My first impression of the trailer of Jacques Audiard’s (Dheepan) The Sisters Brothers was that it too quickly and too easily reminded me of a Quentin Tarantino movie. The trailer teetered the line of whether it was a drama or a comedy, a comedy masquerading itself as a drama, a drama trying to go for so much dark humor, or a variety of other techniques made famous by one of the most recognized and revered directors of our generation. But, honestly, to compare Audiard’s film to one of Tarantino’s would be doing a disservice to Audiard because, with all due respect, this movie is better than anything Tarantino has directed since Pulp Fiction, except for 2009’s Inglourious Basterds. This Tarantino was one that I really liked but one, like each of his movies, had more than a few scenes that were difficult to watch. I know plenty of fans out there think I’m crazy for not liking The Hateful Eight, Django Unchained, Sin City, Kill Bill, Jackie Brown, etc., but these just haven’t been my kind of movies. Some of the stories are good, and some of the screenplays he creates are worthy of the Oscar nominations they receive. Still, I just can’t personally get past so many of the uncomfortable scenes, especially his unneeded yet repetitive use of the “N” word over and over again. I haven’t seen a Tarantino film in the theatre since 1996’s From Dusk Til Dawn (a movie whose first half I loved before falling apart). The Hateful Eight was a movie I turned off after 15 minutes because of its excessive use of the “N” word. Django Unchained, a film that uses the “N” word over 100 times, was one that I suffered through because it had received a nomination for Best Picture of the Year, and I watch all Best Picture nominated movies. I am still upset that I gave that movie over two hours of my time. But this is not a post to voice my displeasure over Tarantino. It is a review to celebrate Audiard’s in making a name for himself in this unique movie, which I didn’t totally love but did appreciate. What a 2018 it was for Joaquin Phoenix (Reservation Road, Irrational Man)! This man had had an amazing year. He had Best Actor Oscar buzz surrounding three different movies (Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot, You Were Never Really Here, The Sisters Brothers). And while he ultimately did not receive his fourth Oscar nomination, he carried three completely different films, playing three completely different characters in movies that earned 89%, 76%, and 86%, respectively. He’s become a pretty polarizing actor and angered many people with his retirement hoax back in 2009/2010 just to promote his movie I’m Still Here. Nevertheless, the man continues to deliver in absolutely all of his movies. And he delivers here as Charlie Sisters, the younger brother of Eli (John C. Reilly – Chicago, Stan & Ollie), two hitmen who work for The Commodore. They aren’t particularly unlikable men, but they do terrible things, such as killing anyone their boss asks them to kill without question. Part of the Tarantino part, I think, is the guiltless consciousnesses. While I don’t think Charlie and Eli particularly WANT to kill any of these people, it doesn’t necessarily seem like they are losing sleep after they do so. Continue reading The Sisters Brothers (2018)

Hostiles (2017)

The very first scene of Scott Cooper’s (Crazy HeartOut of the Furnace) under the radar Hostiles lets you know one thing right off the bat. We get a good 10-minute scene of a four-person group of Comanche warriors comes rolling out of nowhere, attacks a family of five in the brutalist of fashions before burning down the ranch and taking off with their horses. After this scene, we get the title Hostiles pop up on the screen, and we know quickly we are in for something different than Will Smith’s Wild Wild West. This movie is not for the weak at heart. If you do not like tragedy, this film is not for you. If you have the stomach for, sometimes, senseless killing, characters who carry anger so deep that it burns their souls, and guilt so heavy that it tears lives apart, then this movie could be for you. If you crave a good old-fashioned western, then this movie surely will suffice. And if you want to see A-listers like Christian Bale (The FighterThe Dark Knight Rises), Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl, A United Kingdom), Jesse Plemons (The Post, Other People), Timothee Chalamet (Call Me By Your NameLady Bird) and Ben Foster (Hell or High WaterLone Survivor) continue to cement their names in Hollywood then you can’t go wrong with Hostiles, easily one of the five best movies of 2017. Though it’s unlikely to dethrone Wind River for me, it’s doing its best to make a case in the 11th hour.
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The Magnificent Seven (2016)

I’m starting to think that Hollywood is either completely out of original ideas or knows that they are guaranteed a minimum hundred million dollars at the box office if it remakes a movie and has a starting cast of Hollywood A-listers. There is absolutely no reason why The Magnificent Seven needed to be remade. I have not seen the first one, but I imagine it was probably a pretty good movie when it was made…56 years ago. There have not been many great westerns produced in this century and, while they were good, most of them have been remakes (3:10 to Yuma, True Grit). There have been others (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, The Homesman). Still, there really haven’t been many in this genre of films when compared to others. While I appreciate a good western (Young Guns was my number one movie of all time from when I was 15 until I was about 25), I dislike a bad western just as much as I dislike a poor movie in other genres. And while I wouldn’t necessarily call The Magnificent Seven a poor movie, I definitely would call it an unneeded one. Unless you love westerns, there’s no need to see this movie. This absolutely is a movie that you don’t need to see on the big screen.
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Lawless (2012)

lawless movie posterTom Hardy (The Dark Knight RisesWarrior) is quickly establishing himself as a leading man in Hollywood. Since really coming onto the radar after 2010’s Inception, Hardy went on to win audiences over in the surprisingly good Warrior before donning a mask as Bane and becoming 2012 biggest villain in The Dark Knight Rises. In a movie full of top-notch acting, Hardy turns in the performance of his young career in John Hillcoat’s (The Road, The PropositionLawless.
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The Quick and the Dead (1995)

I was hoping for a good western movie. I didn’t get it. I was looking for some quality actors to shine in roles I hadn’t seen them in before. I did not find that, either. The talented Sam Raimi’s (Spider-Man, For Love of the Game) The Quick and the Dead failed in many aspects. This movie had never been on my “must-see list” but had been on my “hope-to-see list” for the last 15 years. I was hopeful but not optimistic that I would find the movie rewarding. For a western, I have not much happened in this one. The film was very predictable. It was one of those movies with too many stupid coincidences to take seriously.

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