Showing posts with label Gore Verbinski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gore Verbinski. Show all posts

Saturday, July 6, 2013

A Fistful of Westerns! (Brad's Picks)


A couple days ago America celebrated another birthday with the release of the much maligned, and certainly under appreciated Bruckheimer/Verbinski Western extravaganza, The Lone Ranger.  It's been a long hard road to the silver screen, taking five years and over $250 million dollars, but the world has finally been assaulted by Johnny Depp's bird-hat wearing Tonto.  It is this year's John Carter, more attention has been given to its budget and the ballooning behind-the-scenes than the final product, but those that bothered to see it this holiday mostly seem to fall on the "Hated It" half.  I was pretty much ready to go in guns blazing, but I quickly found myself intoxicated by its oddity.  The Lone Ranger is weird, gross, violent, ugly, bloated, and perverted.  I thought it was amazing, and possibly my favorite Blockbuster of the Summer so far.  I am deeply perplexed by this reaction, and will certainly have to sit down for a second viewing to check my sanity, but as of right now The Lone Ranger is my favorite Bruckheimer production since the first Pirates of the Caribbean.


That being said, this ain't your granddaddy's Saturday Morning Serial.  Those looking forward to a cartoony reinvention of their beloved characters should look elsewhere.  This is not Sam Peckinpah's West.  It's not John Ford's Monument Valley.  This is not tribute filmmaking.  It's a straight up Gore Verbinski weirdo picture, and there might be hints of the familiar, but the closest it gets to homage is the bonkers Spaghetti Western tone.  Not Leone or Corbucci, but The Lone Ranger has moments that dip into the painfully unfunny absurdity of Mario Bava's Roy Colt & Winchester Jack.  I am happy to report that there are a handful of whacko critics out there defending the film, and if you're curious to see other chipper reviews, click on over to IndieWire to experience the minority opinion.


At the very least, The Lone Ranger has reawakened the Westerns conversation.  People bemoan its demise, but even if we're not getting a dozen new Westerns a year, the genre is far from dead and I can think of at least a handful of films that made my Top Ten lists during the 21st Century (Django Unchained, True Grit, Appaloosa, 3:10 To Yuma, and The Proposition).  I am a dork for many things. I love Star Trek.  I love Planet of the Apes.  I love Hellboy & Batman.  But my all time love has to be the Western with its frontiers and outlaws, it's open ranges and the men determined to fence them in.  Picking my Top Five Westerns is a nearly debilitating challenge.  I can tell you that my Top Three have been set in stone for at last ten years, but the back two switched in and out a half dozen times before I just settled with the final result.  It really does pain me not to include Johnny Guitar, but I finally let it slide due to a lack of viewings.  However, give me a few years and 5 more rewatches, and I'm betting Johnny Guitar will fall into the number 3 or even 2 slot.  As it stands today, these are my true loves.


5.  The Proposition:  A revisionist Western (gah, it seems like all Westerns are revisionist Westerns!) set in the Australian Outback, The Proposition begins when one brother (Guy Pearce) is captured by the British government, and charged with the assassination of his eldest brother (Danny Huston).  If he refuses, the youngest Burns Brother (Richard Wilson) will be executed for the crimes he perpetrated under their demonic tutelage.  The Proposition has to be one of the angriest and meanest movies I've ever experienced.  It is absolutely unrelenting in its pessimism and critique of westward expansion (or in this case, Global expansion).  Danny Huston might as well be Satan himself, a murderous rapist so uncompromisingly vile that the audience forgives Pearce's obvious scumbag mantle.  The Duke does not ride to the rescue of the damsel.  There is only misery here.  But it's a hell of a heart-thumper, a real deal horror film minus the spooks and goblins.


4.  The Professionals:  Here is your classic adventure film.  A Texas millionaire (Ralph Bellamy) hires four tough men to venture down into Mexico to retrieve his young bride from a villainous bandit king (Jack Palance).  As is the case with most Westerns, the rich = bad men and the poor = brave revolutionaries.  Our heroes are the Man's Mans of yesteryear, real tough dudes that just don't appear in Hollywood these days.  Lee Marvin is the military might, a born leader of men aching to fight the good fight.  Burt Lancaster is his scalawag buddy, he cares less about the cause and more about the reward.  Woody Strode is the halfbreed Apache scout, a mean hombre with a bow & arrow.  Robert Ryan is the horse wrangler, and the man who struggles the most with the morality of their mission.  Directed by Richard Brooks, The Professionals very much has that Dirty Dozen vibe, but its smaller cast allows for Lancaster & Marvin to charm their way into your heart as they dismiss gold for glory.  Honor over wealth, the stuff of Legend.


3.  Once Upon A Time In The West:  Clint Eastwood's Dollars Trilogy was simply Sergio Leone practicing for this film.  As epic as anything seen in The Lord of the Rings or Lawrence of Arabia, Once Upon A Time In The West is an attempt to cram in every genre convention from railroad expansion to mysterious strangers, from saloon brawls to sunset sayonaras.  This is kitchen sink cinema at its finest.  Henry Fonda is a profit killer - men, women, children, whatever - but he's too cocky to be unstoppable.  Charles Bronson is Harmonica, the drifter who stumbles into town with an obvious agenda for death.  Claudio Cardinale is the hooker with the heart of gold, a woman who falls into the gunsights of American Rail.  And Jason Robards is the bandit with delusions of domesticity.  Over the course of three hours these four characters butt heads and get their Spaghetti Western extreme closeups.  Ultra melodrama done right.  


2:  Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid:  It's impossible to watch this film and not also witness the breaking of Sam Peckinpah's heart.  This is the end for the director.  He would have a couple of films after this one (even one great one), but Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid is his last hurrah in the genre he reinvented.  Couple that with the already emotionally devastating plot, and you have one of the most sombre films ever produced.  Kris Kristofferson is The Kid, the last of a dying breed.  The railroad has connected America, the Wild West is forever gone.  James Coburn is Sheriff Garrett, a former outlaw who knows when the show's over and takes the Government's money in exchange for his best friends capture.  Both men are trapped by destiny, or at least their perceptions of it.  During the last moments of the film you can sense Peckinpah's unwillingness to adhere to history (his tiny undertaker cameo is the silent scream), and I sometimes fantasize for his Inglourious Basterds revision.  Alas, death is there.


1.  Unforgiven:  For me, and a lot of people, Clint Eastwood is the Western.  The Good The Bad and The Ugly, The Outlaw Josey Wales, High Plains Drifter.  How can you pick one above the other?  Well, personal nostalgia gets part of the credit for this film's placement at numero uno; Unforgiven was the first Western I ever saw in the theater.  At the time, I remember thinking the film was a little boring and my Dad was verbally abusive towards it upon exiting the theater.  However, when I rediscovered the picture in college, after having consumed everything by Sergio Leone and John Ford, I deeply responded to the climactic switcheroo.  For nearly all it's runtime, you are on Clint Eastwood's side.  He's an old widowed gunfighter who picks up a bounty to put supper on his children's table.  But the killings he commits along the way reawaken the bad man inside.  He's not the noble High Noon white hat of the 1950s.  He's William Munny, the killer of women and children.  He's damned.  And he knows it.


--Brad

Friday, May 24, 2013

The Japanese Tonto Poster


Why do I love this Japanese poster for The Lone Ranger?  I certainly have a fondness for the old Japanese posters for The Man With No Name trilogy.  Something about Spaghetti Westerns scrawled with Japanese lettering just seems right.  Tonto here looks really menacing too, the hatchet ready to swing.  But the trailers don't jive with the Lone Ranger movie I want.  And yes I most certainly want a Lone Ranger movie.  Loved the original series as a kid and I even dug the (hindsight being 20/20 atrocious) 80s adaptation.  But do I want a Captain Jack version?  No.  Still, I gotta support the genre I love and I will be there opening night.

--Brad

Thursday, March 8, 2012

First Look: Tonto & The Lone Ranger


Here's our first real look at Johnny Depp & Armie Hammer as Tonto & The Lone Ranger for Gore Verbinski's new Disney Epic.  Honestly?  I'm not sure if I really like it...or specifically, the look of Depp's Tonto.  Is this going to be another Jack Sparrow character, based in humor?  I don't want that.  But I also never asked for a goofy Green Hornet and I got that and I enjoyed it.  So, the jury is still out and I'm really looking forward to seeing the first trailer.  But the film is not set for release until May 31st of 2013; that's a long way off and it's way too early to freak out about how the Great Mouse is handling one of your favorite properties.  But this is the internet and this is what I do.

--Brad

Monday, February 27, 2012

Hi Ho Silver!

The Lone Ranger & Tonto by David Palumbo

Currently, Disney's new Lone Ranger is filming in New Mexico under the direction of Gore Verbinski and starring The Social Network's Armie Hammer as the masked vigilante and Johnny Depp as the reliable sidekick Tonto.  Depp has been trying to get this film off the ground for a good while now and after some serious financial backandforth between Verbinski and Disney, the budget has been settled and 2013 will give us the first Summer Blockbuster Western since 1999's Wild Wild West...uh...the less said about that the better.  


Now I hope the film has ditched the rumored werewolf plot, but I'm guessing there will be some serious Pirates of the Caribbean supernatural hokum at play somewhere in the narrative.  And if that's how we gotta play to get kids psyched about Cowboys & Indians again than I'm all for it.  Please, America, bring The Western back to its former glroy.  I've been doing my part with my recent string of Western reviews for cineAWESOME! and after 2010's $100 million True Grit take I think we're more open to the oater than ever.

Anywho, Geek Tyrant via CBM posted the below videos depicting The Lone Ranger's trusted stead Silver practicing the film's big stunt sequences.  The production Silvers are being trained by veteran Hollywood horseman Rex Peterson, who worked on Appaloosa, Hidalgo, The Ring, The Three Amigos, and Leonard Part 6.  

I love this stuff.







Well, however this venture turns out it's gotta be better than 1981's The Legend of the Lone Ranger...


--Brad

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Rango: The First Great Film of 2011!

Warning:  Prepare Yourself For A Hyperbolic Lovefest. 


A week ago I was halfway tempted to label Drive Angry 3D the first great movie of 2011.  And as much as I loved that demented little love letter to all things Roger Corman and Exploitative, I didn't get the wibbly, giddy goosebumps that I got when basking in the glory of Gore Verbinski's surreal, equally cinematicly referential, but absolutely, wickedly head-trippy Rango.  

Produced by Nickelodeon Movies (the same sharp tacks that brought us The Last Airbender, Hotel For Dogs, The Spiderwick Chronicles, Clockstoppers, Good Burger, and Nacho Libre -- okay, that last one is kinda awesome) Rango is labeled a CGI comedy western.  A description that appears accurate, but misses the bananas of it all.  It is CGI (fact...but the performances were also captured in-camera).  It is comedic (in parts, there are also plenty of parts that are just shockingly ghastly and horrific...roadkill, man, roadkill).   It is a Western (a Weird Western that should certainly play alongside other genre-bender greats like Walker and From Dusk Till Dawn 3).  But, yeah, Rango is El Topo loco.  


Technically, Rango is a masterstroke.  Director Gore Verbinski (the Pirates trilogy, The Ring remake, and...wait for it...The Super Awesome Nicolas Cage downer The Weather Man) chose to not only record the cast together, but in an attempt to capture "the spontaneity of live action," filmed the script.  The animation is just stunning.  Film fans have come to expect great work from the F/X wizards at ILM, and as their first foray into feature length animation I have to say that the gauntlet has been dropped on those at Pixar and Deamworks.  Rango is the one to beat.  When I saw the below trailer last year, it was the stunning detail to the Western characters that immediately struck a chord with my genetic cinema code.


And Rango is EPIC.  Johnny Depp is The Lizard With No Name.  He's Billy the Kid.  He's Django.  He's The Three Amigos.....yeah, that's probably most apt.  Lucky, Dusty, and Ned all rolled into one.  A struggling actor searching for an audience and discovering a town oppressed by not only Rattlesnake Jake's tyranny, but also this crazy Chinatown water conspiracy.  He plays the part, but will he become the part???  Existential stuff.  And Rango's got the Spellboundy Salvadore Dali dream sequences to match the crazy philosophy.  


With the exception of Isla Fisher who just disappears into the voice of Beans, the cast is pretty obvious stuff.  Johnny Depp has mastered his Spazz persona.  Ned Beatty is naturally gruff and old timey as the tortoise mayor.  As Bad Bill and Rattlesnake Jake, Ray Winstone and Bill Nighy are quintissentially Britishly villainous.  But, obvious is good.  Obvious is the point.  These are Western characters hit on the head, nails driven deep into the wood.  And when Timothy Olyphant represents your Spirit of the West, well, slap your knee and grin cuz this movie is genius.


Rango is definitely funny.  But it's not a Ha-Ha fest.  This is not Kung Fu Panda 2, or Cars 2, or Puss in Boots, or The Smurfs.  Rango is an original creation that might alienate a few folks (although apparently not too many since it snatched #1 with $38,000,000), but with an open mind for weirdness and Western geekiness and some gross and icky bits then you'll gobble this Madness down.  I know that when I left the theater I had that same pleasant sensation I experienced after Shaun of the Dead, a sensation that I had just witnessed the birth of a classic.  Crazy talk?  Maybe, but right now, I'm high on Rango.  Time to start buying vinyl collectibles.  


Rango:  **** out of *****

--Brad