Displaying items by tag: Danny Huston

Wednesday, 04 December 2024 12:04

Dead Don't Hurt, The

dead dont hurt

THE DEAD DON'T HURT

 

US, 2024, 129 minutes, Colour.

Vicki Krieps, Viggo Mortensen, Solly McLeod, Garrett Delahunt,.W. Earl Brown, Danny Huston, Shane Graham, Rafel Plana, Atlas Green, Ray McKinnon.

Directed by Viggo Mortensen.

 

Now veteran actor, Viggo Mortensen, became a household name when he appeared in the Lord of the Rings trilogy as Aragorn. Mortensen is not only an actor, he is a writer, musician, composer, and has brought all these talents to directing The Dead Don’t Hurt.

In fact, the setting is in the West during the American Civil War. However, the action takes place on the Nevada border and the war itself seems distant. Which means that the film is set in the West, its saloon, gamblers, sheriff, shootouts, but the story is told in such a way that it could take place at any time.

The film opens, significantly because of his title, with a death. There is also a violent shootout in the streets, a court case, a lynching execution. But we have to pay attention because the film moves both forward and with flashbacks, important for the audience to gauge which is which to appreciate the characters and the dramatic development. Sometimes this is something of a challenge.

But, in the flashbacks, we are introduced to Olson, Scandinavian background, arriving in a port, eager to make his way in America. But, the audience has also had a long introduction to a young girl, Vivienne, French background, her father executed by the British, a forthright young girl with an imagination (including a Knight in armour coming to visit her, a scene with which the film opens and will recur). Olson and Vivienne hit it off immediately, some comeuppance to an arrogant young suitor in the town, and they travel to the Nevada border, setting up house, Olson a capable builder, working for some of the money men, profits from gambling, in the local town.

Vivienne is played by Vicki Krieps, the core of the drama and our emotional response.

Audiences need to keep checking on the timespan. After a while, there is a visit and plea from a recruiting agent for serving in the war, Olson, despite Vivienne’s protests, volunteering to go, absent for many years, some letters getting through, some not.

At the dramatic centre of the film is Vivienne’s coping during Olson’s absence, the working in the local bar, hired by the moneyed man, but aggravated by his irresponsible sociopathic son. There are dire consequences for everyone concerned and, gradually, the storytelling arrives back at the violence in the streets, and at the death and dying scene we first saw.

As expected, ultimately, this is also an avenging Western.

The film is intriguing, playing with the audience’s appreciation of characters and story, the interplay and tension between the past and the present – and, with the death, the irony of the title and its implication that The Living Do Hurt.

  1. The title? Evocative? The opening, Vivienne and her death, the flashbacks, her life and death?
  2. A variation on Western themes? The era of the Civil War? The Nevada border? Migrants, experiences of war, our, mining, gambling, our in the West?
  3. The location photography, the beauty, the desert, rivers, ports? The musical score?
  4. Setting of mood with the opening, the Knight in armour, in Vivienne’s dream, his reappearing during the film, echoes of Joan of Arc, his appearing, reassuring, at her death? Focus on Vivienne’s face, Olsen and his grief?
  5. The violent episode in the town, at Weston Jeffries, cold, calculating, arrogant, the shootings, the death of Billy? The response of the Mayor, going to the grave, Olsen burying his wife, Vincent present, the story of the violence in the town?
  6. Court case, the victim for the killings, the religious righteousness of he judge, the woman in the court defiant, guilty verdict, the hanging? Olsen observing and leaving?
  7. Olsen and Vincent leaving, riding through the countryside?
  8. Audiences adjusting to the time sequence, the bulk of the film being flashback, the story of Vivienne, French, her parents, the war, her father hanged? In the Port, the relationship with the wealthy man, his treatment of her in the restaurant, her defiance, her attraction to Olsen, talking, going off with him, taking him to the house, the art gallery? Forming a bond?
  9. Olsen in the town, his background, war? Travelling with Vivienne, the land, setting up, his building talent, working on the other barns? Vivienne upset at first, the flowers and trees, their life together? Her going to work in the bar, the older Jeffries and his power, the discussions with the mayor, the financial deals, the gambling, the adjacent houses, prostitution? The manager of the bar, some integrity? Weston Jeffries in the bar, his arrogance? The violent episode with Weston Jeffries and the piano player, the song, the brutality, commanding him to play? Vivienne and later support of the pianist, his family, the daughter, learning French?
  10. Olsen, the Civil War, the recruiter in the bar, his deciding to join the Army, Vivienne and her upset, his leaving? Away for so many years, the letters, some received, some not?
  11. Vivienne, managing, the house, her independence, at the bar? Weston Jeffries following her, her cat in cutting, the violent rape, the aftermath, in the bar?
  12. Her pregnancy, giving birth, the child, the years passing, the bond between mother and son? Life in the town? Olsen and his eventual return, the important sequence revealing the child, Vivienne quietly spoken, Olsen and his response, leaving, in the river, swimming? His anger at Jeffries?
  13. The boy, his manner, with Olsen, the acceptance, the building and Olsen showing his son how to hammer? The possible good life?
  14. The request for Olsen to become sheriff, the discussion with the Mayor, his office? Billy and his delivering the letters, his becoming the assistant? But the audience knowing from the beginning what was to happen?
  15. Vivienne, illness, syphilis, from Weston Jeffries, the dangers, her death and her vision? The burial?
  16. Olsen and Vincent, riding, the encounter with Weston Jeffries, the guns, the confrontation, Olsen throwing the knife, overcoming him?
  17. The story continuing, Olsen and Vincent arriving at the ocean, contemplating the ocean? Sadness, regrets, hopes?
Published in Movie Reviews
Wednesday, 04 September 2024 12:32

Crow, The/ 2024

crow 2024

THE CROW

 

US, 2024, 111 minutes, Colour.

Bill Skarsgaard, FKA twigs, Danny Huston, Joette Simon, Laura Birn, Sami Bouajila, Jordan Bolger.

Directed by Rupert Sanders.

 

The Crow is based on comic novels by James O’ Barr. The first film, in 1993, made quite an impact in the era before the success of the Marvel Universe and its glamorous superheroes. Eric Draven, guided by a Crow, is a very dark comic book hero. (And the film had some notoriety because of the accidental death of its star, Brandon Lee, during production). 1996 to 2005 there were three sequels, much less successful than the original. There was also a television series.

The present film has been in production discussion since 2008. It was finally directed by Rupert Sanders (Snow White and the Huntsman, Ghost in the Shell). And, for the new incarnation of Eric, Bill Skarsgaard (sinister as Pennywise in the two It films, villain in John Wick 4). All was set for a revival of the franchise – but this film was not well received.

For audiences who have been following the franchise with enthusiasm, they will probably be in favour of this version. However, for the ordinary audience, there will be need to express a word of caution. In an official synopsis of the plot, the word to describe many of the deaths throughout The Crow is “savage”. As we watch so many of the killings of Eric’s enemies, swords and knives, guns and physical attacks, “savage” seems something of an understatement. They are particularly graphic, some visually brutal, alarming, and many audiences they will feel they want to turn away.

With this caution, it can be said that James O’ Barr as created quite an intriguingly dark mythology, a young addict in rehabilitation (where all the inmates where pink tracksuits! A bit of colour in the dark film) meets a young woman on the run from psychotic criminals who finds it safer to be in jail. They bond. They escape. They fall in love. They are tracked down – and murdered.

And here is the intriguing aspect. Eric comes to life again, in a strange purgatorial railyard, encounters Kronos, who enables him to go through experiences of death, violent assault deaths, but self-heal, not die. He has the task to rescue his fiancee from hell. He is commissioned to wreak revenge on the sinister villain, played in gentlemanly but slice style by Danny Huston, a man who has sold his soul to the devil long since, surviving by killing people, whispering in their ear to control them to self-destruction.

A revenge quest, a challenge to audience sympathies about Eric (with Bill  Skarsgaard looking particularly young, too young? Even though he is in his early 30s). The violent culmination takes place during an Opera, the violence being operatically violent.

While this film contributes to the legend of The Crow and an alternative hero to the glamorous superheroes, it reminds us that we live in a violent era.

  1. 21st-century version of the comic book character? The popularity of the books? The Brandon Lee film version and the accident? The sequels and the impact? The television series?
  2. The basic plot, Eric, his fiancee, death, not dying, the revenge pursuit of the criminals, the supernatural elements? A new interpretation?
  3. The opening, Eric with the horse, the barbed wire, wanting to save it, the injuries to his hand? These images recurring later? His growing up, drug addiction, arrested, imprisoned? Life in prison, everybody wearing pink tracksuits? The discipline, the training, the sessions?
  4. Shelley, friends with Zadie, the video, compromising, Roeg and his determination, Marion as his assistant? Capturing Zadie, whispering in her ear, her death? Shelley pursued, the police, safer in prison than out? In prison, the encounters with Eric, friendship, dependence, the escape, setting up house, falling in love? Safety? But Roeg pursuing, Eric having seen Marion and Sophia in the prison? The irony of Shelley being Sophia’s daughter?
  5. The pursuit, Roeg and the dangers, capturing the couple, their deaths?
  6. Eric, age, looking young, the tattoos, waking up, the encounter with Kronos in the railyard, explaining his situation, Shelley and her being lost forever, the possibility of redemption, Eric and never dying but experiencing the pain of death and injury, the guidance of the symbolic Crow, the mission of revenge?
  7. Eric, his new situation, the friendship with Chance, the thugs catching up killing Chance?
  8. Eric, the confrontations, the deaths, his not dying, self-healing? The cumulative effect of the revenge theme, so many deaths, the brutality, the variations of weapons, numbers of death? The effect on Eric?
  9. Learning about the video, Shelley and the killing, losing faith in her, Kronos warning Eric?
  10. The interview with Sophia, Roeg and his promises, choosing her lifestyle over her daughter? Roeg whispering, her death?
  11. The buildup to the opera sequence, the performance of the Opera, the audience, Marion and her associate in the box, the phone calls to Roeg? The operatic nature of the revenge, Eric as an operatic figure, the succession of deaths intercut with the opera, Marion and her warning?
  12. The buildup to the confrontation with Roeg, his self-confidence, the back story of doing the deal with the devil, living on but killing people? Marion and her death? Her head? The final defeat of Roeg?
  13. And the possibility for future life and death experiences for Eric?
Published in Movie Reviews
Tuesday, 09 July 2024 11:03

Horizon. An American Saga. Chapter 1

horizon

HORIZON. AN AMERICAN SAGA, CHAPTER 1

 

US, 2024, 181 minutes, Colour.

Kevin Costner, Sienna Miller, Sam Worthington, Jena Malone, Michael Rooker, Danny Huston, Owen Crew Shoe, tatanka Means, Ella Hunt, Tim Guinee, Giovanni Ribisi, Scott Haze, Tom Payne, Abby Lee, Will Patton, Jim Lau , Georgia McPhail, Luke Wilson, Angus McFadyen, Isabelle Fuhrman, Hayes Costner, Michael Angarano, Jeff Fahey, Dale Dickey, Jamie Campbell Bower, David O'Hara and James Russo.

Directed by Kevin Costner.

 

Kevin Costner has had a long screen career, over 40 years, winning an Oscar for Best Director in 1994 Dances with wolves. Apparel for at relations between Native Americans and those who have come from beyond America. He is a low-key film, Open Range, was praised for its picture of the American West.

For 20 years, Costa has been working on an ambitious project, Horizon, An American Saga, creating an epic story, collaborating with writers, discussions with studios, financing. Finally, the first two chapters have been made, Costner investing his money into his project. At the time of release of this chapter, the third chapter has begun filming for 2025 release.

As might be expected, the saga is vast in scope. It begins in 1859, a printed poster advertising Horizon, an entrepreneur encouraging the building of towns in the West. And this motif, as well as the printing of the poster, recurs during the film. There are many strands of narrative, and’s for a while and audiences wondering how the strands connect. But, as the narrative progresses, we discover the links and connections.

The principal focus is on a settlement in the San Pedro Valley, a father and son taking out acclaim but then killed by the local Apaches. Horizon offers a great deal of focus on the Native Americans, the traditions and beliefs, the invasion/intrusion by the settlers, the feeling of threat, the violent responses, indeed visualising here a massacre and conflagration of a settlement, and the various responses of the white community, the role of the military, independent scouts and trackers, those with a vengeance against the Indian attacks. There are scenes of Native American community life, and the clash between leaders who accept the inevitable incursions of the settlers and those who want to cut them off.

After the massacre and Fire, survivors moved to a fort, the film showing details of life fort, the commanders, working with the settlers, touches of ordinary life, within the outbreak of the Civil War and the young soldiers having to go off to fight.

Audiences may have forgotten about a Montana sequence so early in the film, a woman who shooting old man, her fleeing with a child, the family of a man who shot and who survives, rugged settlers, bound on vengeance, sending the two sons to search for the escape woman and bring back the child.

Enter Kevin Costner himself, riding into the fort, doing business, but encountering a young prostitute who is also a babysitter for a couple in the fort, eager to do business’s

  1. An ambitious project? The work of Kevin Costner? 19th century American history, the American West?
  2. The scope of the project, this first chapter, three hours, the introduction to the themes, the range of stories and characters? 1859 into 1863?
  3. The cinematography, the landscapes, the deserts, the mountains, the mesas, encampments, the towns, the seasons, the rail links, the Apache communities, dwellings? The epic musical score?
  4. The introduction, the title, the advertising for Horizon, settlements in the West, the towns? The opening, father and son, taking the site, observed by the Indians? The arrival of the missionary, the derelict man the ruins, the discovery of the graves?
  5. The transition to the settlement, the establishing of a town, perhaps, tense, the community hall, the dance, the characters, the Kittredge family, the return home? The attack by the Apaches, the fights, the deaths, the fire and the conflagration, surviving citizens, the African-American couple, the attack on the home, mother and daughter in the tunnel, the rifle barrel for breathing? Young boy, his behaviour at the dance, not dancing with his mother, staying with his father, sent away to scout, surviving?
  6. The arrival of the military, Gephart has commander, age, personality, command? Riordan, his personality, work? The other troops? The burial of the survivors? The rescue of mother and daughter? Moving out to the fort? The establishing of life at the fort, protection,, the mother and daughter, the accommodation for them, the episode of Riordan organising the event for Elizabeth, the mother and her reactions? Signs of settlement?
  7. The introduction of the episode in Montana, Lucy and her shooting Sykes, her escape, the family gathering, Mrs Sykes is tough, her sons, serious, yet Caleb and his talking, intervening, erratic? The setting out on a mission to find Lucy? Of the plot left in abeyance for quite some time? Resuming the theme, Lucy becoming the villain, her relationship with Will, Mary (Marigold) a local prostitute, living with them, babysitting? Will and his eagerness to promote Horizon towns, the plan to meet the visitors? Lucie/Ellen and her personality, tough, the encounter with the men, the realisation of the truth, the interactions, realising what was happening, his death? Caleb going into the town to get the baby?
  8. The introduction to Hayes Ellison, Kevin Costner character? Riding, his work, into the fort, the encounter with Marigold, her place in the town, with a woman Will, the baby, her flirting, approaching Hayes, the glimpse of the other prostitutes in the town, the hard women of the town, accommodation? Hayes, the baths, following Mary’s invitation, the encounter with Caleb, the to-ing and fro-ing, Caleb and his taunts, the gun, the shootout? Hayes taking Marigold and the baby? Their travels together, the winter, camping, seeing the searches at the rail head, going into the town, possible settlement, Marigold and her note, on the Horizon paper, giving the child to the Chinese? Leaving the note for Hayes?
  9. The portrait of native American life? The scouts, the leadership, observing the settlers? The screenplay explaining their stances, the long heritage, the bond with the land? The customs, beliefs? The attack on the camp, the destruction? Is conversation with the chief, differences of opinion, to repel the invaders, the chief realising that they would continue to come? The camps, the women, mothers and children? The group leaving?
  10. The group searching for the child, going to the store, the Native American and the boy, Nathanial kept Rick and his presence, the group of trackers, the discussions about scalping Indians and payments? The confrontation in the store, wanting Nathanial to shoot, his refusing? Letting the man and the boy go? The range of personalities, the mediator, those knowing the Apache language? The continued trips, the pursuit of the Indians, the shootout, Nathanial as Lookout, his reactions, shooting in defence, the men and the scalping is, sitting together, the payments hoped-for?
  11. At the fort, Riordan and the working in the fields with the others, Frances and the approach of Gephart, is statements, her response, romance? The Civil War, the young recruits, Elizabeth and her sadness of the going, giving them the material is keepsakes, Riordan and his explanation of their importance for the young men when they were being killed? The troops leaving?
  12. Col Horton, in command, policies, the discussions with Giffard and Riordan? Staying behind the fort, the military command, watching the troops go to the Civil War?
  13. The return to Montana, Caleb’s body, the reaction of the Sykes couple, hard? Still wanting vengeance?
  14. The story of the wagons going through cancers, observed by the Indians? The leaders, the range of people, men and women, old and young, the hardships, the slow travel? The proctors, arrogant, his sketching, bespectacled, and her manner, the mug of water, their being rebuked by then we can, the episode with Juliet washing, the leering couple, the rebuke by van waiting, their arrogant response, the drenching rain, the continued travel? And the other members of the contract family in the wagon train?
  15. The end of the first chapter, the collage of the various strands of the story, summing up, serving as a preview for the next chapter?
Published in Movie Reviews