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Appaloosa (R)
Genre: Western
Directed by: Ed Harris (Pollock)
Starring: Ed Harris, Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger, Jeremy Irons, Timothy Spall

In a week where an inordinate number of movies opened locally, the clear winner for me is Ed Harris’ Appaloosa—the one film that left me with a sense that I had really seen something, and that what I had seen was at least very close to what the filmmaker intended. Depending on whose review you read, Appaloosa is either a very traditional western or it’s a revisionist one. In fact, it’s a little bit of both, but then westerns are so rare these days that the definition can be broadened. A case could be made that the Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men (2007) qualifies as a western. But the film that Appaloosa most reminded me of is another of the Coens’, Miller’s Crossing (1990).

No, Appaloosa doesn’t have the same plot as Miller’s Crossing, but it has the same tone and a not dissimilar dynamic as concerns the two main characters. Looked at in any depth, the thrust of both films is the romance between two men. Here these are Virgil Cole (Ed Harris) and Everett Hitch (Viggo Mortensen), who roughly fill the roles of Albert Finney and Gabriel Byrne in Miller’s Crossing. In both films, there’s the slightly older man, who’s not as bright as his young companion on whom he’s come to rely. Similarly, in both cases, there’s a sense of a long history between the two—and of that history being threatened by the arrival of a woman on the scene. The primary difference here is that the situation is less sexualized.

Virgil and Everett are hired killers—of a special kind. They’re employed by small western towns in need of men to bring law and order to their communities. So they’re hired killers with the—very broadly defined—legal powers to be such. Their latest town is Appaloosa, where the city fathers—headed up by the very nervous Phil Olson (Timothy Spall in a performance that alone would make the film worth seeing)—have become fed up with the lawless ways of local bad man Randall Bragg (Jeremy Irons). The tactics of Virgil and Everett may not suit everyone, but their results are hard to argue with.

Enter Allison French (Renée Zellweger), a woman who claims to be a widow. She rides into town on the train one day with a couple bags, a hatbox and (she says) one dollar. Virgil is immediately interested in her (even more so when he establishes that she’s not a whore), and soon she’s getting at him with the more or less willing help of Everett, who she seems to view as a confidante. It’s not long before Virgil finds himself buying an under-construction house that’s up for grabs, where he plans to settle down with Allie (“She likes to be called Allie”)—to the slightly sad bemusement of Everett, who suspects that Allie isn’t quite the idealized woman Virgil thinks she is. Without saying too much, it’s fair to say that she isn’t.

This domestic side of the film is interrupted when one of Bragg’s men (Gabriel Marantz) has an attack of conscience and decides to testify that he saw Bragg murder the former town marshal and his deputies. At this point, the plot becomes more complicated—and more like a traditional western with all the tropes the genre has to offer. But it should be noted that this is handled well, and the story never loses sight of the psychological complexity of its three main characters and their interrelationships. If it feels a bit like an old Howard Hawks western (no slacker with the subtext himself)—right down to capping the film with a pop song (courtesy of Tom Petty) for the ending credits—that’s not a bad thing. In fact, it gives Appaloosa the sense of the legacy of the genre that movies like Open Range (2003) and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (2005) don’t quite have.

In the end, what makes Appaloosa such a satisfying work is that it is grounded in characterization, and Harris and his performers are capable of making the viewer care about the fates of those characters. Sure, there’s nothing but slightly effete, lip-smacking villainy to Jeremy Irons’ performance, but he’s just window dressing; the focus is on the three principal players. That’s what works. The great thing about the western today is that while we get very few of them, those we get tend to be of a pretty high caliber—and Appaloosa continues that trend. Rated R for some violence and language.


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In a week where an inordinate number of movies opened locally, the clear winner for me is Ed Harris’ Appaloosa—the one film that left me with a sense that I had really seen something, and that what I had seen was at least very close to what the filmmaker intended.

What, you didn’t get anything out of Beverly Hills Chihuahua?

Sure, there’s nothing but slightly effete, lip-smacking villainy to Jeremy Irons’ performance, but he’s just window dressing

It’s a step up from Eragon, anyways….

Sean Williams

Oct 10, 2008
at


It’s a step up from Eragon, anyways….

Ben Kingsley in Transformers was a step up from Eragon.

Ken Hanke

Oct 10, 2008
at


I saw this movie last night and really enjoyed it.  It was engrossing.  I felt like the strongest aspect of it was the sympathy of the director for the different dilemmas facing each of the three main characters. Also Viggo Mortensen was terrific as always.  He seems to choose his movie projects with a lot of care and this one was no exception.

Jane

Oct 11, 2008
at


Ben Kingsley in Transformers was a step up from Eragon.

Mr. Hanke, the Lascaux cave paintings were a step up from Eragon, if not chronologically, then at least artistically.  Better color rendering, too.

Somewhere in Hollywood, there is a freelance digital artist whose sole specialty is applying lens flare to clips of fantasy heroes unsheathing their swords.  I will find this man and split his head with a meat cleaver.  In a stunning feat of dramatic irony, I will film the murder. 

And apply lens flare to the cleaver blade.

Sean Williams

Oct 12, 2008
at


Somewhere in Hollywood, there is a freelance digital artist whose sole specialty is applying lens flare to clips of fantasy heroes unsheathing their swords.

My guess is that he lives next door to the sound guy whose sole contribution to cinema is applying that metal-on-metal sound whenever a sword or knife is unsheathed from anything. Two doors down is the sound gentleman who makes tires squeal on dirt roads, but the other two won’t acknowledge his presence.

Ken Hanke

Oct 12, 2008
at


The guy who adds kazoo noises to the soundtrack every time anything is damaged has a domestic partnership with the guy who adds saxophone solos every time a woman’s bare legs are exposed.

The people who color-saturate blood for retro pulp films are the equivalent of crack dealers lurking in the shadows behind 7-11.

Sean Williams

Oct 12, 2008
at


I’ve just got to hand it to the team who adds elaborate sounds of ANYTHING that happens in space!

Staci

Oct 23, 2008
at


I hope everyone has seen this by now. The characters are well drawn and the interactions between them are what makes this a really good movie.

Jim Shura's avatar

Jim Shura

May 11, 2009 at


I’ll have to see this - the movie somehow got by me.  I read the Robert B. Parker novel though, and enjoyed it.  It read a lot like Spenser and Hawk in cowboy hats (which is probably why I liked it).

Rufus

Jun 26, 2009
at 8:18 AM


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