John Ford Point, Monument Valley
THE LONE RANGER is currently on location in Monument Valley .
Director Gore Verbinski, Johnny Depp (Tonto) and Armie Hammer (Lone
Ranger) are working among the buttes immortalized by John Ford in STAGECOACH,
FORT APACHE, SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON, MY DARLING CLEMENTINE, THE SEARCHERS,
and several others.
Leon Rippy in YOUNG GUNS II
Leon Rippy, late of ALCATRAZ
and DEADWOOD, plays Collins in the re-telling of the story of the masked
man. Leon ’s
wife Carol tells me, “Monument
Valley is incredible! The
Navajo people are everywhere, many in their native attire. The Tribal Leaders
came out with their families and blessed the film. Johnny spent time with them,
truly interested in their issues.” More
updates to come!
GOOD FOR NOTHING – Movie Review
GOOD FOR NOTHING is a damned good Western! It’s a five year labor-of-love by newlyweds
who decided to make a movie instead of buying a home. If it does half as well as it should at the
box-office, they’ll be buying a mansion.
Writer-director Mike Wallis and producer-star Inge Rademeyer met working
at Peter Jackson’s celebrated Weta Digital, the New Zealand FX house
responsible for some of the astonishing sights in RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE
APES, AVATAR, and the LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy among many others. For three years they spent their vacations
western location-hunting throughout New Zealand , and it was worth
it.
At a time when film stories have become maddeningly
convoluted, GOOD FOR NOTHING’s plot is refreshingly direct. Englishwoman Isabella Montgomery (Inge
Rademeyer) is on her way to her uncle’s ranch when she witnesses a killing, and
is kidnapped by the man who did it (Cohen Holloway). The man, in a nod to Clint Eastwood’s Man
With No Name is simply The Man. Cowboy
heroes traditionally are men of few words, but The Man takes taciturn to a
level that approaches William S. Hart.
He says not a word for the first sixteen minutes of the film, and he
doesn’t say anything to Isabella for the first 28 minutes, although they are
together almost continually from the moment they meet. And when they finally do speak, here is their first exchange:
Isabella: What do you plan to do with me?
The Man: Give you a poke.
And yes, that’s what propels much of the story. Because The Man finds to his humiliation that
he has a…problem, and captor and captive travel together throughout the West
looking for a cure. So no, it’s not even
slightly politically correct, and no, you might not want to take a young kid,
unless you want to explain the oblique references to erectile dysfunction.
The Man is not someone who will ever say a word, or even
throw a fist, when a bullet will do.
Holloway is completely convincing as a lightning-fast and deadly shot,
and one of the men he kills is a lawman.
That brings his sheriff brother, a deputy friend, and a handful
(fistful?) of scurvy gunmen on the trail of The Man, and what they suppose to
be The Whore he’s traveling with. And I
don’t think it will be considered a spoiler to say that as the Isabella and The
Man travel together, against all her intentions, a romance blooms.
Writer-director Wallis’ script crackles with crisp but
natural dialogue and sly humor; ala Lubitsch, he respects the audience, and
expects them to catch the slight inflections in voice, facial expression or
gesture to understand things would be much more coarse and less funny if they
were directly stated. The infrequency of
the vulgarity is what makes it so funny when it does occur. His direction of actors and staging of action
seems deceptively effortless, the result of a clear vision of his story and
characters down to the slightest detail.
Director of Photography Mathew Knight, who has shot
documentaries and commercials worldwide, does a stunning job of turning New Zealand into the America West, capturing
broad vistas, desert, and rock formations that bring Monument Valley
to mind. The western town they visit at
night is notable for being lit believably, with neither too much light nor
impenetrable shadows. Isabella is
photographed attractively without being over-glamorized; not surprisingly she
looks more feminine and attractive as she progressively wears less and less
clothes – though it’s nothing revealing by modern standards. Actually, one of the most pleasing images is
of the two riding double, Isabella behind The Man, her long petticoat covering
the rump of their horse, whose tails juts out just below the hem.
In the silent movie
that GOOD FOR NOTHING is for long stretches, John Psathas’ score is soaring, stirring
and dramatic. At times it suggests
Morricone, but without aping him, and the Elmer Bernstein influence is there as
well. And speaking of sound, every
gunshot is so clear that you can hear the metal clink of the hammer hitting the
shell. The combination of that audio
with the haze of black-powder smoke subtly underlines the seriousness, as does
the fact that The Man frequently takes time to do something rarely seen in even
the best Westerns: he reloads!
While much has been made of GOOD FOR NOTHING’s perceived
homage to Sergio Leone’s work, to me it is much more reminiscent of the better
American Westerns of the early 70’s, especially Don Siegel’s TWO MULES FOR
SISTER and Richard Sarafian’s THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING. Not that GOOD FOR NOTHING is imitative of
either, but it manages to tread the same tricky line of balancing tough action,
romance and humor. And speaking of
humor, the depraved and inept posse that trails the couple could have come
straight out of a Burt Kennedy Western like HANNIE CAULDER.
The success of such an intimate story rises and falls on the
two romantic leads, and whether the audience cares about what happens to
them. Happily, Cohen Holloway, a star in
New Zealand
television, and South African-born Inge Rademeyer, who is making her feature
debut, are both up to the task. They are
natural and believable, attractive (except for that disconcerting cut across
his nose) and at times admirable.
I don’t know yet what the distribution plans are world-wide
– I know it played a festival in New
York City last month – but I’ll find out. It’s well worth seeking out.
HATFIELDS & MCCOYS’ TRAILER
The History Channel miniseries, toplining Kevin Costner as
Devil Anse Hatfield, will play for three nights over Memorial Day Weekend. Here’s a first look!
SANTA CLARITA COWBOY FESTIVAL APRIL 21st &
22nd
Saturday and Sunday, April 21st and 22nd
you can stroll the streets of Melody Ranch, where all the greats, from Gene
Autry to Matt Dillon to Maverick, to the DEADWOOD folks, and most recently
Quentin Tarantino’s DJANGO UNCHAINED cast have trod. This is a wonderful not-to-be-missed
event.
Admission is $20 a day for adults, $10 for kids, with
discounts for two days. There will be a
wide variety of musical performances at four stages. The Melody Ranch
Museum will be open to
give you a peek into movie history.
Every manner of Western art, crafts, clothing, boots, and hats
imaginable will be available.
Authors of Western fiction and fact will be signing and
selling their tomes. Entertainers like
champion gun-spinner Joey Dillon, saloon pianist Professor David Bourne and
magician Pop Haydn will be performing.
Cowboy poets and story-tellers will be rhyming words and spinning yarns. And there will be a ton of activities aimed
at kids of all ages.
On Thursday, April 19th -- no admission for this – at Old Town Newhall on Main
St. from 7 PM to 11PM, join the party filled with
Music, Dancing, Food Trucks, Western vendors, and the unveiling of two new
Stars in Old Town Newhall. The plaques for the new inductees into the Walk of
Western Stars will be unveiled at 7:30 p.m. on the West side of Main Street . The
inductees are Glenn Ford, who will be represented by his son Peter Ford, and
Oscar-winning editor Joel Cox, who will attend.
On Friday, April 20th, at 3:00 p.m. at the
Repertory East Playhouse 24266
Main St. in Old Town Newhall, join Peter Ford, son
of the great Glenn Ford, and author of Glenn Ford – His life and Movies. They’ll be screening "The Rounders" and afterwards Peter will discuss
his father's life and movie career.
That’s all for this
weekend! Next weekend, among other
things, we’ll look at the fight to save 35mm film, which is getting buried by
digital projection.
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Content Copyright
April 2012 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
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