SWEETWATER – a Movie Review
Showing posts with label Jason Isaacs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Isaacs. Show all posts
Sunday, January 5, 2014
‘SWEETWATER’ BLU-RAY GIVEAWAY, PLUS WESTERNS COMING TO YOUR TV (OR PHONE OR I-PAD OR WHATEVER)!
UPDATED 1/8/2014 - SEE 'WHEN CALLS THE HEART' REVIEW
SWEETWATER -
BLU-RAY REVIEW AND GIVEAWAY
I keep thinking there’s not a big difference between
DVDs and BluRays, but when I saw the BluRay version of SWEETWATER, after
previously viewing the DVD, I was stunned by the beauty of New Mexico. And
January Jones. There really is that
something extra in the BluRay format.
Not that I’m tossing my DVDs – Hell, I’ve got a couple thousand VHS
tapes I’m trying to convert to DVD. But
if I’m given a choice of format, BluRay will win out.
If you, like me, do your best to see every western
and neo-western and pseudo-western that comes out, then you know, the problem
isn’t finding time for them all, but simply finding
them. And I have concluded that
SWEETWATER is the best theatrical western for the year 2013. That’s why I’m delighted that the distributor
has provided me with two BluRay copies to share with Round-up readers. I’m re-printing my review from October minor
changes, and after that I’ll be telling you about the special features, and how
you can win SWEETWATER.
SWEETWATER – a Movie Review
SWEETWATER, a beautifully produced western directed by Logan
Miller and co-written by him and his brother Noah from the story by Andrew
McKenzie, opens with a mysterious, babbling figure, in the person of Ed Harris
as Jackson, in a breathtaking New Mexico desert, dancing and making apparently
religious incantations to the rising sun. Next we see Jason Isaacs as
Prophet Josiah, amidst a phalanx of huge and oddly menacing white crosses,
performing his own off-center-of-Christian ceremonies. These men
represent the opposing forces that will butt heads over a murder and, in so
doing, tear asunder the lives of January Jones and Eduardo Noriega as Sarah and
Miguel Ramirez, a young married couple struggling to farm a future from the
sun-blasted desert of New Mexico. They haven’t a snowball’s chance in
Hell.
To put it mildly, the deck is stacked against the couple. We
quickly gather that the young beauty is a former whore in a town where she used
to ply her trade. Her husband Miguel is an eternal optimist, forever
giving people the benefit of the doubt, but his generosity is wasted on people
who see in him nothing but a dirty Mexican. Their paltry savings are
stolen by the local banker. The local merchant is far more interested in
voyeuristically pursuing Sarah than in doing business with them. When
Prophet Josiah’s sheep eat their crops, and they suspect he’s killed their dog,
the local sheriff is not even indifferent. He’s contemptuous.
Eduardo Noriega
and Jason Isaacs
And Prophet Josiah who, with his flock, was run out of Utah, soon
sets his sights on beautiful Sarah. Prophet Josiah is the man with the
money and the power in this Hellish region, and has the willing support of all
the local businessmen and government. At the same time, Sheriff Jackson
has come to town to investigate the disappearance of two men, relatives of the
Governor, whom we have seen Prophet Josiah murder for trespassing.
This is the grim world of the town of Sweetwater. Brad
Shield, a 2nd unit
cinematographer on many big movies, has a wonderful eye for simultaneously
capturing the full-hued beauty and stark, barren ugliness of the New Mexico
desert. And the stunning but not over-glamorized loveliness of January
Jones, who shoulders much of the forward momentum of the story.
Logan Miller directs with a precision and confidence that mirrors
his strongest characters. Nothing is arbitrary in the telling. He
is blessed with several strong actors, and skilled at drawing performances from
them, and he has an impressive control of camera movement. There is
almost a hypnotic sense of menace to the scene where Miguel is threatened by a
pair of men who circle him, one on foot moving clockwise, the other on
horseback moving counter-clockwise. It could have easily been overplayed,
but it is all the more frightening because it seems natural, as does Miguel’s
distraction. Another scene, a hunt through the maze of a sheep pen, is
particularly intense.
January Jones
Jason Isaacs, who first impressed as the sadistic Col. Tavington
in THE PATRIOT, and continued hatefully as Lucius Malfoy in the HARRY POTTER
movies, is excellent as the sanctimonious hypocrite Prophet Josiah. You
watch him, knowing that you’d never follow him, but others
would.
January Jones, famous as Betty Francis, later Betty Draper in MAD
MEN, compels your interest and sympathy by the strength of her character, and
determination against tremendous odds. She embodies the pioneer
spirit. And rather than modernizing the story to make it ‘relatable’, it
stays in period, and portrays the desperation of a lone woman searching a vast
land for her missing husband. There is no phone, no police, no APB, no
tracking a cell signal. Pregnant, alone and searching, she must still
plow the land or see the crops die. She doesn’t have a sidekick to share
her thoughts with, so much of her performance is facial and physical, and while
she is helped by the occasional camera crane-shot showing the enormity of her
challenge, the credit for the performance must go to her.
Ed Harris and a pair
of corpses
But the fun starts whenever Ed Harris appears on the scene.
As Cornelius Jackson, with dapper suit and shoulder-length scarecrow hair, he’s
part mystic, part detective and part loony. At times he plays it so broad
it’s like he’s channeling Malcolm McDowell from CLOCKWORK ORANGE. But
it’s sheer pleasure to watch him and Prophet Josiah face each other, especially
the dinner scene where Jackson demonstrates his contempt for the religious
leader.
SWEETWATER is a beautifully made Western, with a compelling plot,
gripping action, strong performances, beautifully filmed and edited. It
is an ‘R’ for a reason. In addition to some beautiful nudity on the part
of Miss Jones, there is male nudity only a masochist would enjoy, apparent
masturbation, sexual cruelty, and some rough language.
I do have some quibbles with moments that seem contrived.
For no apparent reason, a man presents a woman with a parasol, so that she’ll
later be able to jab him in the eye with it. Two men dig up a well-hidden
body for the apparent purpose of being discovered doing it. A character
says some revoltingly crude remarks just before being killed, as if to let us
know that he’s no loss: believe me, we already knew. And just once in a
while, I’d like to see a movie where a religious character is neither a
hypocrite nor crazy.
‘SWEETWATER’ – THE SPECIAL FEATURES
The BluRay comes with three special features; the theatrical
trailer, singer Hudson Moore performing the end-title theme ‘Cold Grey Light of
Dawn’, and a ‘making of’ short. The
trailer is solid. Hudson Moore’s
performance is very good – it’s an excellent song, and it’s almost too bad that
it’s used over the end credits rather than in the film. But this is not a ‘video’ per se, but the
audio track played over a still photo of the singer. The ten-minute ‘making of’ short was my
favorite of the special features, as it gave so many cast members, from the
stars to the supporting players, a chance to speak. It was also interesting to see Logan and Noah
Miller, who are identical twins with matching hair and beards, in action. Ed Harris tells you which twin has the mole
on his face, to tell them apart, but they moved too fast for me to catch it.
‘SWEETWATER’ – THE CONTEST
I have two beautiful BluRay copies of SWEETWATER, and I’ll be awarding
them to a pair of Round-up readers, and one of them could be you! How do you win? Answer the questions below.
#1.) Lovely January Jones may be best known for MAD MEN, but she
is not a stranger to sagebrush. She’s
starred in two previous western films, one made for TV, and the other a
modern-day Western. What are the titles?
#2.) Ed Harris is also comfortable in the saddle. Like January Jones, he’s done one western for
the big screen, and one for the small.
He also did a film where he jousted on a motorcycle. Name all three.
#3.) It’s not Eduardo Noriega’s first rodeo either. What was his previous western?
#4.) While villainous Jason Isaacs was never in a western before,
he was in two films plotted in North America in the 18th century,
one set in Canada and one set in the United States. Name them both.
#5.) Stephen Root, who plays a very unpleasant character in
SWEETWATER, has the longest western career of almost anyone in the movie,
starting with a guest shot in a series in 1990.
He had a regular role in a modern-day western series, voiced Teddy
Roosevelt once, did a modern western for the Coen brothers, and did two
westerns with Johnny Depp. Name any
three of the six.
#6.) Finally, the original story writer, Andrew
McKenzie, chose the name of Sweetwater for the town, as an homage to a classic Western movie.
Name it. (Note: There are
actually two legitimate answers to this.
I know which one Andrew intended, but to be fair, I’ll accept either
one.)
Please email your entry to swansongmail@sbcglobal.net. Make sure to include your snail-mail address,
and put ‘Sweetwater Contest’ in the subject line. We’ll be accepting entries until midnight,
Sunday, January 12th, 2014.
The two winners will be randomly selected from all correct entries. Good luck!
NEW WESTERNS ON THE WAY:
‘JUSTIFIED’ RETURNS ON TUESDAY JAN. 7 ON ‘FX’
On Tuesday night, Timothy Olyphant will be back as
Raylan Givens, and creepy Walton Goggins will be back as Boyd Crowder for
season 5 of one of the best shows on TV, JUSTIFIED. While everyone involved with the series feels
the loss of the great Elmore Leonard, whose story FIRE IN THE HOLE was the
basis of it, they are among the best writing, producing, directing and acting
talent in the business, and will carry on in a way that would have made Dutch
proud.
‘WHEN CALLS THE HEART’ SERIES PREMIERES SATURDAY JAN.
11
On Saturday, January 11th The
Hallmark Channel will premiere their new Western series, WHEN CALLS THE
HEART. The turn-of-the-century story about
a privileged young Canadian woman who moves to the frontier to teach children
in a mining town, and perhaps to fall in love with a Mountie, the story first
appeared on the cathode ray as a TV movie (see my review HERE ) in October.
Based on Janette Oke’s very popular Canadian
West series of romantic westerns, she’s also the lady who created the LOVE
COMES SOFTLY series, which proved hugely popular series of movies for Hallmark and for
writer/producer/director Michael Landon Jr.
The series has different stars, Erin Krakow and Daniel Lissing, in the
leads, but maintained Lori Loughlin from the movie.
‘WHEN CALLS THE HEART’ SERIES PREMIERES WITH STRONG
OPENER
Daniel Lissing and Erin Krakow
Good news for Western fans who found the ‘WHEN CALLS
THE HEART’ movie pilot a bit unsteady: the premiere episode of the series, ‘Lost and Found’, airing Saturday,
January 11th, shows much more confidence, and a pleasing blend of
the comic and dramatic. The Hallmark Channel and Michael Landon
Jr. might very well have a winner here, of the ‘Doctor Quinn On the Prairie’
variety.
While the movie had parallel stories, of niece and
aunt as frontier teachers in different periods, which did not always mesh well,
the series version focuses only on the niece in the beginning of the 20th
century. Elizabeth Thatcher, now played
by Erin Krakow, is still a daughter of wealth and privilege, and still at least
partially motivated to teach in a frontier mining town by her younger sister’s
belief that she doesn’t have the gumption to make a go of it. And
while there still is a Mountie in the story, he’s no longer a friend from
home. Now played by Daniel Lissing, Mountie
Jack Thornton is, in fact, a constable who had a much more interesting post
until he was transferred to this sleepy town of Coal Valley, perhaps at the
request of Elizabeth’s powerful father.
The funeral.
Only Lori Loughlin, as widowed mother Abigail
Stanton, remains from the cast of the movie, and has remained lovely to look at
while bringing a strength and solidity to the proceedings. The episode recaps the final moments of the
movie – reshot – where the young schoolmarm arrives in town after having her
stagecoach held up, and learns the place is a well of sorrow: an explosion at
the mine killed fifty-seven men, making Coal Valley largely a town of widows
and orphans. And with no real school,
and the church recently burned to the ground, the learning takes place in a
saloon.
In the midst of her first day of class, a
trumpet-blast from the mine clears the classroom – it signals that the last of
the miners’ bodies have been recovered, and with them, a last goodbye scrawled
by a dying miner on a piece of timber.
Determining who wrote it, and hence to whom it belongs, is much of the
remainder of the episode, and through the questioning, we begin to meet the
townsfolk. And also through said
questioning, Constable Thornton starts to suspect there may be more to the mine
explosion than a simple accident.
The western town sets and the quality of the
photography are more than pleasing to the eye.
The costuming and art direction are of a much higher caliber and
consistency that in the TV movie. The
performances are by and large strong.
Elizabeth’s early mistakes, and occasional catastrophes, are funny and
endearing, and if the hostility between her and the Mountie are a predictable
‘cute meet,’ the fact is, it works.
The plank everyone claims.
Based on Jasette Oke’s novel, the plot of the opener
serves to set up what is no doubt coming over the next nine weeks, as we learn
more about the townspeople and the mine’s management. There is one inexplicable leap of logic near
the end of the episode, but it concerns nothing so crucial as to spoil the
story. I’m looking forward to week two.
‘KLONDIKE’ PREMIERES MONDAY, JAN 20 ON DISCOVERY
Executive Producer Ridley Scott brings a big,
brawling tale of the Klondike gold rush, starring Tim Roth, Sam Shepard,
Richard Madden and Abbie Cornish.
‘QUICKDRAW’ SEASON 2 SHOOTING FOR HULU
Comedian John Lehr will be back as Harvard-educated
lawman John Henry Hoyle in a new season of QUICKDRAW for the internet entertainment
site HULU. I don’t know when the new
season will begin playing, but I understand that they are currently shooting at
the Paramount Ranch, and will be there until mid-February. You can read my review of season one HERE, and if you don’t know the show, the trailer below,
from season one, will serve as an introduction.
GONE
WITH THE WIND’S ‘INDIA WILKES’, ALICIA RHETT, DIES AT 98
She
only acted professionally once, but it was a pip! After auditioning for the part of Melanie,
which went to Olivia de Havilland, the Savannah-born portrait artist won the
role of the sister of Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard), India. An appropriate choice for her role, her
great-grandfather was Senator Robert Rhett, known as ‘The Father of
Secession.’ Offered other films roles,
but not thinking herself right for them, she returned to Charleston, and
continued with her career in portraiture, as well as painting children’s book
illustrations.
The great-granddaughter of U.S. Sen. Robert Rhett, who was
known as the "Father of Secession," Alicia Rhett was born in Savannah
in 1915 but moved to Charleston following the death of her father, army officer
and engineer Edmund Rhett, in World War I.
HAPPY
84TH BIRTHDAY TO TV’S ‘BRONCO’ – TY HARDIN!
Tall,
muscular, handsome and modest, Ty Hardin, star of BRONCO, one of Warner
Brothers’ great western series of the ‘50s and ‘60s, turned 84 on New Years
Day. He also appeared in war movies like
BATTLE OF THE BULGE and PT 109, and did several spaghetti westerns as
well. And true to his Warner
Brothers/BRONCO/CHEYENNE/MAVERICK roots, he’s the only guy I know who has TWO
poker nights a week! Happy Birthday
Ty! Click the links below to read my
two-part interview with Ty.
SOMETHING
NEW FOR ‘SPAGHETTI METAL’ FANS!
Here’s
a peek behind the scenes of the Aussie metal band A BREACH OF SILENCE shooting
their new video, NIGHT RIDER, which is a tribute to the Pasta West as well as
Red Dead Redemption. Lots of
head-banging music, pretty saloon girls, and nice photography, especially the
make-up related stuff. I’m looking
forward to the finished video!
THAT’S A WRAP!
I’ll be giving you details very soon about two new
westerns that have just wrapped, and reviewing the first authorized set of DVDs
of the complete first season of THE RIFLEMAN!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright January 2014 by
Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
Sunday, October 6, 2013
'SWEETWATER' OPENS OCT 11 - REVIEWED AND INTERVIEWED!
SWEETWATER – a Movie Review
SWEETWATER, a beautifully produced western directed
by Logan Miller and co-written by him and his brother Noah, opens with a
mysterious, babbling figure, in the person of Ed Harris as Jackson, in a breathtaking
New Mexico desert, dancing and making apparently religious incantations to the
rising sun. Next we see Jason Isaacs as
Prophet Josiah, amidst a phalanx of huge
and oddly menacing white crosses, performing his own off-center-of-Christian
ceremonies. These men represent the
opposing forces that will butt heads over a murder and, in so doing, tear
asunder the lives of January Jones and Eduardo Noriega as Sarah and Miguel
Ramirez, a young married couple struggling to farm a future from the sun-blasted
desert of New Mexico. They haven’t a
snowball’s chance in Hell.
To put it mildly, the deck is stacked against the
couple. We quickly gather that the young
beauty is a former whore in a town where she used to ply her trade. Her husband Miguel is an eternal optimist,
forever giving people the benefit of the doubt, but his generosity is wasted on
people who see in him nothing but a dirty Mexican. Their paltry savings are stolen by the local
banker. The local merchant is far more
interested in voyeuristically pursuing Sarah than in doing business with
them. When Prophet Josiah’s sheep eat
their crops, and they suspect he’s killed their dog, the local sheriff is not
even indifferent. He’s contemptuous.
Eduardo Noriega and Jason Isaacs
And Prophet Josiah who, with his flock, was run out
of Utah, soon sets his sights on beautiful Sarah. Prophet Josiah is the man with the money and
the power in this Hellish region, and has the willing support of all the local
businessmen and government. At the same
time, Sheriff Jackson has come to town to investigate the disappearance of two
men, relatives of the Governor, whom we have seen Prophet Josiah murder for
trespassing.
This is the grim world of the town of
Sweetwater. Brad Shield, a 2nd
unit cinematographer on many big movies, has a wonderful eye for simultaneously
capturing the full-hued beauty and stark barren ugliness of the New Mexico
desert. And the stunning but not
over-glamorized loveliness of January Jones, who shoulders much of the forward momentum
of the story.
Logan Miller directs with a precision and confidence
that mirrors his strongest characters.
Nothing is arbitrary in the telling.
He is blessed with several strong actors, and skilled at drawing
performances from them, and he has an impressive control of camera
movement. There is almost a hypnotic
sense of menace to the scene where Miguel is threatened by a pair of men who
circle him, one on foot moving clockwise, the other on horseback moving
counter-clockwise. It could have easily
been overplayed, but it is all the more frightening because it seems natural,
as does Miguel’s distraction. Another
scene, a hunt through the maze of a sheep pen, is particularly intense.
January Jones
Jason Isaacs, who first impressed as the sadistic
Col. Tavington in THE PATRIOT, and continued hatefully as Lucius Malfoy in the
HARRY POTTER movies, is excellent as the sanctimonious hypocrite Prophet
Josiah. You watch him, knowing that you’d never follow him, but others
would.
January Jones, famous as Betty Francis, later Betty
Draper in MAD MEN, compels your interest and sympathy by the strength of her character,
and determination against tremendous odds.
She embodies the pioneer spirit. And
rather than modernizing the story to make it ‘relatable’, it stays in period,
and portrays the desperation of a lone woman searching a vast land for her
missing husband. There is no phone, no
police, no APB, no tracking a cell signal. Pregnant, alone and searching, she must still
plow the land or see the crops die. She
doesn’t have a sidekick to share her thoughts with, so much of her performance is
facial and physical, and while she is helped by the occasional camera
crane-shot showing the enormity of her challenge, the credit for the
performance must go to her.
Ed Harris and a corpse
But the fun starts whenever Ed Harris appears on the
scene. As Cornelius Jackson, with dapper
suit and shoulder-length scarecrow hair, he’s part mystic, part detective and
part loony. At times he plays it so
broad it’s like he’s channeling Malcolm McDowell from CLOCKWORK ORANGE. But it’s sheer pleasure to watch him and
Prophet Josiah face each other, especially the dinner scene where Jackson
demonstrates his contempt for the religious leader.
SWEETWATER is a beautifully made Western, with a
compelling plot, gripping action, strong performances, beautifully filmed and
edited. It is an ‘R’ for a reason. In addition to some beautiful nudity on the
part of Miss Jones, there is male nudity only a masochist would enjoy, apparent
masturbation, sexual cruelty, and some rough language.
I do have some quibbles with moments that seem
contrived. For no apparent reason, a man
presents a woman with a parasol, so that she’ll later be able to jab him in the
eye with it. Two men dig up a
well-hidden body for the apparent purpose of being discovered doing it. A character says some revoltingly crude
remarks just before being killed, as if to let us know that he’s no loss: believe
me, we already knew. And just once in a
while, I’d like to see a movie where a religious character is neither a
hypocrite nor crazy.
SWEETWATER opens in theatres on Friday, October
11. It’s available on VOD right now.
An Interview with ANDREW MCKENZIE, the man who
created SWEETWATER
Andrew McKenzie
I think if a writer had any idea how long it would
take, and how difficult it would be, to get almost any movie made, he’d never even type FADE IN. Once you write your screenplay, if you’re
lucky enough to have anyone interested in making you’re movie, the number of
drafts, the number of changes asked for, the number of people who have input
but disagree with each other about those changes – it’s mind-numbing.
But incredibly, sometimes movies do get made, and they often make the
writer proud, even though the finished product is often far from the writer’s
original vision. SWEETWATER is a movie
that would make any writer proud. It is
the brainchild of New Zealand-born Andrew McKenzie, and many a Western fan will
guess at a major influence on his writing based on the title; Sweetwater is the
town that McBain is trying to create out of the desert, by sheer force of will,
in Sergio Leone’s masterwork, ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. Kind of the way writers create reality out of
paper by sheer force of will.
The screenplay is credited to Noah and Logan
Miller. The story is by Andrew
McKenzie. Here is his story of how the
story of SWEETWATER came to be.
HENRY PARKE: I notice you’re from New Zealand. Did you grow up with western movies and TV
shows?
ANDREW MCKENZIE: I grew up in a small town in New
Zealand. I now call Melbourne, Australia
home. New Zealand was isolated. We had two televisions channels, so a very
limited choice in what to watch. The
video store would only get one copy of a film and I recall that whenever we
went to get a movie, something like EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, it’d be out, so we’d
end up getting what was left, and there seemed to be a big population of Bud
Spencer/Terence Hill films and Spaghetti Westerns. I related to Leone’s films in particular
because they were very visual, about characters in isolation, struggling to
survive. Probably relates to my
childhood as well – I was more of an individual making my own rules rather than
following everyone else.
HENRY: What westerns, western stars, western
filmmakers, impressed you growing up? What
are your favorite western movies? Who
influenced your work?
ANDREW: The Spaghetti Westerns first and
foremost. ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST
is my all-time favorite. Strong visual
storytelling throughout and a dry, laconic wit that suits me perfectly. I love the black comedy, the poetry of
violence. I generally feel alienated by
American westerns, aside from Peckinpah. I’m cynical about the mythic structure and
prefer the true grit of a character rather than an archetype. The day I discovered THE WILD BUNCH though,
my life changed. Peckinpah is the master
storyteller. My favorite Peckinpah quote
is that he didn’t make Westerns, he made stories about men on horseback, and
that shone through for me in watching THE WILD BUNCH. Here was a story about people, individual
people, and not a cardboard cut-out.
There were no good guys in white hats and bad guys in black hats;
everyone wore shades of gray.
HENRY: In watching the excellent New Zealand-lensed
western GOOD FOR NOTHING, I was struck by how convincingly New Zealand stands
in for the American West. Do you think
there is a sort of kinship between the rural elements of the two countries, a
similar sort of spirit to the people?
ANDREW: Both New Zealand and Australia have the
Colonial spirit of migration, but it is also influenced by the environment in
which they settle. Migrants to New
Zealand may have had issues clearing the land, but the weather and climate
meant that they didn’t have to fight as hard to survive. Australia, on the
other hand, is arguably more like the frontier, and that in my opinion has
formed part of the Australian character, hard and rugged. Whereas New Zealanders are inherently insecure
and don’t strive to challenge. They’d
rather play safe and conservative. I
have to admit I haven’t seen GOOD FOR NOTHING.
I think if you want a sense and feel of things, look at THE PROPOSITION,
because it creates itself into a universe, like Leone’s work is poetry of
violence, and that’s where I like to sit my work as well.
HENRY: The title SWEETWATER is clearly a nod to ONCE
UPON A TIME IN THE WEST, as the name of the town Brett McBain is planning to
build. Was that the genesis of your
story for SWEETWATER?
ANDREW: Yes, very clearly. I had to explain the reference at Sundance because nobody understood the
context. In the screenplay there is a
reference to the town being named Sweetwater, but they didn’t shoot it. I wrote SWEETWATER after I tried to get two
of my other Western screenplays up and off the ground. I wanted to write a small intimate story that
subverted all the genre conventions with the intention of directing it
myself. The screenplay was originally
set in New Zealand – hence the antagonist being a sheep farmer, but they left
that in without context for the film. It
was funny explaining to the cast at Sundance
that that is why he was a sheep farmer, and then it all made sense. Apparently they had trouble finding enough
sheep in New Mexico and even had to bring in some goats to fill out the
herd. SWEETWATER was also a ‘thank you’
and tribute to my friendship with Sergio Donati and I thought it was a perfect
story because both stories had strong female protagonists.
HENRY: How did you come to know Sergio Donati, who
wrote the screenplay for ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST with Sergio Leone?
ANDREW: I was doing my Masters in Creative Writing,
and my case study was ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. I was a member of a few web boards for
Spaghetti Westerns, and Sergio had posted somewhere at one stage. I made contact and said I’m a writer doing my
masters, and we became friends from there.
He is a legendary man, modest and humble, yet ever supportive.
HENRY: What was your working relationship with
Donati? Did he have input on SWEETWATER?
ANDREW: It wasn’t so much a formal working
relationship; we would just casually talk via email. In terms of SWEETWATER, I sent him the draft
when it was finished and he read it and said he liked it. That endorsement meant a lot.
HENRY: Were you more influenced by American Westerns
or Euro Westerns in general, and with SWEETWATER in particular?
ANDREW: Definitely the Euro. I meld everything up into a poetry of
violence; there are harsh undertones but there is also humor. That’s one of the things I learned from
Donati’s writing, like the gag at the end of FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE, counting
up the bounties. I love weaving
characters and dialogue. The other big
influences on me would be Peckinpah and THE WILD BUNCH, and David Milch’s
DEADWOOD. Milch’s dialogue gave me
breathing space to trust in my creative voice.
When TRUE GRIT came out I again felt validated.
HENRY: How long did you spend writing SWEETWATER,
and how many drafts?
ANDREW: Oh, that is a long and complicated
story. It went through a variety of
producers and drafts. I can’t even
recall how many – probably I’m too scared to remember. At one stage when I changed producers I
reverted back to my favorite earlier draft, and that was the one that got
picked up.
HENRY: Westerns are such a tough genre to get
made. What’s special to you about the
form that made you want to do one?
ANDREW: See I don’t think I write ‘Westerns’, or
‘Oaters’. I’m more like Peckinpah in that it is about the character and the
story. I will take the genre conventions
and subvert them and will seldom adhere to them, but for me it is first and
foremost about character. I love the
notion of characters in isolation. I
hate cell phones. I love putting
characters into situations and having them forced to get themselves out of
it. The ‘Western’ is the perfect
environment for that. There is no
cavalry, there is no rescue. You have to
get yourself out of this situation, and that is what makes it emotionally
engaging for the audience. SWEETWATER
was a simple story about a farmer’s wife whose husband disappears one
night. She is led by the town to believe
that he has abandoned her. When she
discovers his body, then she must rise up above all the conflict. Yes, she goes on the vengeance trail, but it
is all told from the character’s perspective rather than the plot.
HENRY: How did you link up with the filmmakers?
ANDREW: A good friend of mine, David Eggby, who is a
cinematographer, was going to shoot SWEETWATER for me when I was
directing. He had shot a film called
IRONCLAD for the producers and gave them the screenplay. That was at the time that TRUE GRIT had just
come out. They picked up the option and
things gathered momentum from there. The
directors came on board because they had a working relationship with Ed
Harris. The original producers and I
stepped away from the production and things proceeded from there.
HENRY: What
do you think of the finished film of SWEETWATER?
ANDREW: This part is tricky to respond to. I’ll be honest: I spent five years of my life
attached to SWEETWATER, with the majority of those attached to direct. I guess I can be diplomatic and say that the
filmmakers had a completely different vision to how I would have directed the
film, but hey, that’s their prerogative.
There are glimpses of it in the final film, but not enough to give me
satisfaction.
HENRY: Were you pleased with the casting? January Jones, Ed Harris, Jason Isaacs, Eduardo Noriega?
ANDREW: Yes, I thought the casting was
outstanding. I ended up spending most of
my time at Sundance hanging out with
Jason Isaacs. We have become good
friends. I’m currently developing a
television series for him.
HENRY: While the core of the story is the same,
there are many changes. The movie’s Prophet
Josiah is combined from your characters of Cole and Reverend Matthew. An ethnic subplot was added by casting
Eduardo Noriega as Sarah’s husband.
Another ethnic element, the American Indian characters, were
removed. The sheriff, a relatively minor
character in your story, as portrayed by Ed Harris in the film, is almost as
important as your female lead, Sarah. What
changes do you most regret?
ANDREW: I think the most regret I have is that so
much screen time was taken away from the character of Sarah. It truly was supposed to be her story
throughout. Here she was in this crazy
world. She was a normal farmer’s wife in
my script, an innocent of sorts. The
first act set her up as supportive of her husband, but you didn’t know that she’s
going to have the strength to carry the story through. In the second act, originally when she
discovers the body, she goes on a pilgrimage to the church to have him
buried. She tries to make sense of
things before she goes on the vengeance trail.
There were a lot of layers and threads that would have made the
narrative more emotionally engaging, but hey, I’m biased.
HENRY: What have you written since SWEETWATER?
ANDREW: I’ve been extremely busy. I have another screenplay, CANVASTOWN, which
I’ll call a period drama. It is set in
Victoria, Australia in 1851, about a small mining community. I’m working on directing that. I’ve completed another couple of spec feature
screenplays and have two television series pilots in development, including the
one with Jason Isaacs. The writer’s life
is always busy, creating new material. I
do have a western TV series that I’d like to see go one day. It’s titled THE BLACK RIDERS and is inspired
by the poetry of Stephen Crane.
Many thanks to Tom Betts, who writes the delightful
and informative WESTERNS...ALLITALIANA!
site for suggesting this interview, and for
introducing me to Andrew.
THAT’S A WRAP!
Can’t believe HELL ON WHEELS is over for another
season! And don’t send me any comments
about the ending just yet – I’m still four episodes behind! Try and catch SWEETWATER this week. You’ll be entertained and impressed. Next week, among other things, I’ll have a
review of a group of thought-to-be-lost American silent films that were found
in a New Zealand archive, and preserved.
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright October 2013 by
Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
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