Showing posts with label Tom Berenger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Berenger. Show all posts

Thursday, October 2, 2025

EXCLUSIVE: ‘ELKHORN 2’ RED CARPET PREMIERE! PLUS ‘RUSTLER’S RHAPSODY’, RON HOWARD’S ‘EDEN’ REVIEWED!

 

‘ELKHORN’ SEASON 2 RED CARPET – TR’S TRIUMPHANT HOMECOMING!

 

Elkhorn Abby Road -- Mason Beals, Elijah Mahar,
Jeff DuJardin, Ashton Solecki
Photo by Morgan Weistling

On Saturday, September 27th, at 6:30 p.m., the entire population –and then some -- of Medora, North Dakota turned out to welcome favorite son Theodore Roosevelt back to the Badlands, the frontier outpost that played such a part in developing the man who would become our 26th President. In Roosevelt’s own words, “I would never have been President but for my experiences in North Dakota.”

Elkhorn, the INSP series, begins in 1884, the time TR spent in the Badlands at his two ranches, the Elkhorn and the Maltese Cross, so it seems fitting that the series should hold its second season premiere in Medora. I’d had the pleasure of visiting the set for some of the filming of season one – you can read my interview with series star Mason Beals HERE -- and I was delighted to be invited to cover the events in Medora for True West Magazine.

Just as surely as Teddy is the protagonist of the tale, French cattle baron the Marquis de Morès and his bride Medora, are the antagonists. I asked Ashton Solecki, who plays Medora, how it feels to attend a red carpet in a town that’s named after her. “Wow! To say it's surreal is an understatement. To be named Medora in the city of Medora, whose children -- many children here are also named Medora! I've met many fans of the show. It's an honor. Happy to be here!”

Ashton Solecki

I asked Ashton what was her favorite thing she’d done during her visit. “Definitely visiting the Chateau,” the actual, still-standing mansion where Medora and the Marquis lived. “Our guides were so kind, so gracious, so knowledgeable. Obviously, I was already a super-fan of Medora, being that I play her, but I got to learn so much more about Medora. For example, I found out that on one bear hunt alone, Medora shot three bears, and she faced down a bear that was charging right at her calmly, coolly, collectedly. The coolest thing was being in their house with her things everywhere, and feeling their love -- it's next level. Honestly, meeting all the locals here, that's been really great because it's one thing to play a role on tv, but to understand how important this person is to the locals and to the history of the area, that was really transformational.” Then, looking into the crowd, she exclaimed, “Oh, my grandma's over there! She's so cute!”

I asked Mason Beals, who plays TR, if this was his first time on a red carpet for his own show. “100%, yes. It's incredible. This is so much fun. Seeing everyone so excited, it just fills my heart. We've been doing this show for a few years now, and to see real love and support in person is just, it makes every hour of work worth it, you know?”

Two Teddys -- Mason Beals and
Joe Weigand

When I asked him what was the most interesting thing he’d seen so far, he agreed with Ashton. “The Marquis' chateau we just saw today; just to see how preserved it is, and that he called that ‘a cabin’! And how huge it was – it just says everything you need to know about him. We had such great guides, and it gave me a lot of perspective on the Marquis. This town knows a lot about Teddy Roosevelt, but to learn even more about the Marquis is just great.” I asked if what he had learned made him like the Marquis more or less. “I actually have more sympathy for him. Definitely. I think that he tried really hard; he had a lot to prove and he was unlucky in those endeavors. He wasn't probably the greatest human being on earth, but I have a little bit more sympathy for the villain after this.”

Matt Wiggans plays William Merrifield, a tough man who already lives in Medora, and wises up not only the future President, but his Maine-born associates, on the ways of the West. Matt had visited the location of TR’s Elkhorn cabin, now gone save for the massive rocks of the foundation, which outline where it once stood. “We shoot the show just north of Los Angeles, in a place called Acton, and I was pretty amazed at how close the sets come to the real thing. But what's been magical is to go out and experience the actual locations. The Elkhorn cabin isn't there anymore, but you can visualize it there. And what Theodore Roosevelt was experiencing in that solitude, that was so imperative in his life, it was goosebump-inducing.

Matt Wiggans

“I spent a lot of my childhood in Spearfish, in Brookings, South Dakota. I played hockey in North Dakota. But this is my first time in Medera, and my wife and I are already super-excited to come back for the opening of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library. I warn people that when I go to historical places or museums, just prepare for hours, because I like to read everything. I love history. This is not just a premiere, it's an experience: <laugh>, it's The Teddy Roosevelt Experience! Understanding how real it is to people -- Eli (Elijah Mahar), who plays Sewell, and I were talking yesterday about how this just makes you want to be better, just step it up even more.”

Sam Schweikert

One of the startling elements of the Elkhorn story is the youth of the people involved: when Roosevelt and the Marquis first clashed in 1884, they were both 26. Newspaper editors in Westerns tend to be Edmond O’Brien or Thomas Mitchell, usually portly drunks in their 50s. Sam Schweikert, who portrays editor Arthur Packard, couldn’t be less like that cliché. As Sam points out, “Arthur Packard was 22 years old when he came out and opened up the Badlands Cow Boy, which is amazing, to be that young and to have that sense of wherewithal to say: I'm gonna go to a place that is lawless and scary, and help spread the word. And given that we're here in this flourishing town of Medora today, I think Arthur had a lot of foresight.”

Elijah Mahar

Next on the red carpet was Elijah Mahar, who plays William Sewall, one of two friends TR sends for from Maine to help build his cabin. Elijah notes, “I grew up in a small town in Washington, a logging, dairy, farming town.” Logging? Does he have the kind of experience his character has? “I have not chopped down trees. I've sawed down trees with a chainsaw, and I have chopped them into logs.” And while he isn’t from Maine, “My wife, her family, have a house in Maine. So we go there every summer for a few weeks. And Sewell’s house is still there. I go see the house, I called the number, left a message saying, Hey, my name's Eli. I'm on a show called Elkhorn. I play Bill Sewell, the man who built your house. I'd love to come see it. Within minutes, there was a message from the woman, who's Bill Sewell's great-granddaughter! She was so excited. ‘I'm a huge fan of the show!’ The next day, my wife and I spent a couple hours there. It was kinda like coming here. I got to be in his bedroom, sit at his desk, saw his bassinet from when he was a baby. It was a great experience. When it's a real person you’re playing, you feel like you have to kind of honor them.”


Brittany Joyner

William Sewell spends some time in the first season pining for his wife, Mary, whom he has left back in Maine. In season 2, he gets his wish, rejoined by his wife in the person of Brittany Joyner, who is a fiery redhead in reality, but a brunette as Mary. Looking at the premiere’s turnout, far more than Medera’s population of 160, she gushed, “This is fantastic! I can't believe that all these people showed up just for little old us -- I'm so glad! It's a really, really cute town, lovely people, lovely food and coffee and experiences. But getting to see the threshold stones of Elkhorn, that has such a close memory for me of filming, and our entire series hinging around this location. The Chateau de Mores was wonderful. It really gave us a good glimpse of how differently they were living than Teddy was, in his rustic cabin in the middle of the woods.” Architecture is not just of passing interest to Brittany.  “I spent the summer in France, doing carpentry on a medieval castle, so I'm recovering from that.”

Jeff DuJardin

Jeff DuJardin plays the Marquis, a Frenchman, of course. Jeff was born somewhat closer, “In the smallest state, in Providence, Rhode Island. I was the very last person who was cast in the project. And part of it might have been, someone who could do a French accent, but maybe not too French.” The rumor is, they auditioned some French actors, whose accents were too thick, and some Americans, of the Pepe le Pew school. “I got an email from my agent. ‘Can you put yourself on tape for this role? You have to do a French accent.’ My mother spoke it fluently. I would hear her on the phone growing up, speaking to my grandmother, so I knew what the French accent was supposed to sound like. So I recorded this audition, and heard back a few days later that they really loved it, and they wanted me to do a chemistry read with Mason. And the rest is history.”

North Dakota First Lady Kjersti Armstrong

Soon it was time for everyone to find seats in Medora’s Old Town Hall Theater for the screening of Elkhorn, season 2, episode 1, A Fine Welcome. The audience loved the show, cheered every star’s entrance, and on the big screen it was striking how beautifully the series is photographed. A second screening would be held to accommodate the overflow crowd. Historian, entertainer and TR impersonator Joe Wiegand had emceed on the red carpet. Inside, the hosting duties were handled by Elkhorn producer Gary Tarpinian, who introduced North Dakota First Lady Kjersti Armstrong, people from various foundations and organizations who had helped with event, the executives of the INSP Channel, and the cast members who took the stage for a spirited Q & A, which is available tonight on the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library’s Youtube page, and below.


 My favorite moment was when someone asked, “What will you remember about your time in North Dakota?”

When series star Mason Beals spoke about how welcoming the town was, and how “incredibly beautiful it is out here. Driving in from Dickinson, passing all those canyons, it's just mind-blowing,” Brittany Joyner commented, “I'm actually 100% shocked you didn't say breakfast sandwiches. They have not stopped talking about them!” The cast took a deep, rhapsodic dive into the merits of the spectacular food available at the C-Store.

Producer Gary Tarpinian

From the audience, Rolf Sletten, author of Roosevelt’s Ranches, and one of the great movers and shakers in making Medora a hub of Roosevelt history, raised his hand. “I wanted to tell you (that) those breakfast sandwiches are made by a woman named Robin Griffin. And Robin Griffin is Margaret Robert's great-great granddaughter. And Margaret Roberts was TR's nearest neighbor at the Maltese Cross Ranch.” In Medora, yesterday, today and tomorrow, Teddy Roosevelt history runs deep!

INSP's Doug Butts, Rolf Sletten, Emily Sletten,
ELKHORN creator Craig Miller, INSP's Dale Ardizzone

Season 2 of Elkhorn will premiere tonight, October 2nd, at 9pm Eastern time – check your local listings – and will continue Thursdays at 9. If you want to catch up on season 1 – and you should – it’s streaming on Prime and Tubi and Plex.


RUSTLERS’ RHAPSODY

Kino Lorber – BluRay $29.95

 

Tom Berenger's 1930s singing cowboy 
doesn't blend in easily.

Since you obviously read Henry’s Western Round-up, I know you’re going to love a lot about Rustler’s Rhapsody – maybe even the whole thing. But your friends may not, if they haven’t got the background. Writer and director Hugh Wilson, had already more than proven himself as a comedy writer, creating WKRP In Cincinnati, and as a comedy director: his first time at bat was the low-cost, hugely profitable, and grossly funny Police Academy, which spawned a 7-film franchise.  Perhaps that’s why he was given a free hand for his next production, writing and directing Rustlers’ Rhapsody. It’s the sort of film that, under normal studio procedures, would never have been green-lighted, not because it wasn’t good, but because most studio execs would never have enough Western movie knowledge to get the jokes.  When Blazing Saddles was made 11 years earlier, Westerns in theatres and on TV were so ubiquitous that viewers couldn’t help knowing all that was required. But Rustlers’ Rhapsody is specifically a sweet celebration of B-Westerns which likely went over the heads of its 1985 audience, and would certainly go farther over the heads of an average audience today.

Tom Berenger, who in 1979 had played Butch Cassidy in the prequel Butch and Sundance: The Early Days, stars as Rex O’Herlihan, not a singing-cowboy B-Western movie actor, mind you, but a singing-cowboy B-Western movie character. A lot of the humor comes from the similarity of so many B’s – Rex wistfully notes that he can see the future, because the future is always the same: every town he enters has the same stores and sheriff’s office, interchangeable schoolmarms and henchmen. He has a fabulous wardrobe but we have no idea where he carries it. He diligently practices shooting guns out of bad guys’ hands – he wouldn’t think to shoot at a person, nor would they be able to shoot him. It’s all begins in exciting, chasing-the-stagecoach-robbers black and white, but a narrator wonders what would happen if Rex had moved from the B’s of the ‘30s and ‘40s to the Westerns of ‘today,’ and guess what: suddenly we are in widescreen Technicolor, and the bad guys are shooting awful close!

Berrenger and Patrick Wayne seem too evenly matched!

The problem is, we never quite learn which ‘today’ they mean – ‘today’ doesn’t seem a whole lot grittier than 1960s TV – certainly not Peckinpah ‘today’. It’s sort of like if Mark Twain wrote A Connecticut Yankee in Somewhere Other Than Contemporary Connecticut. If you don’t know he’s in King Arthur’s Court, you don’t know what to base the gags on. It’s well-worth seeing, and lots of the jokes are very clever but a lot are just not focused enough to pay off.

G.W. Bailey – Lt. Harris from the Police Academy films – is Peter, the town drunk and prototypical sidekick-to-be, who takes naive Rex under his wing. Rex’s kindness is endearing when he lies to Peter, assuring him that, while everything and everyone else is the same going from town-to-town, he’s never met anyone like Peter before.

Berenger plays it as straight and as straight-arrow as he should, with Marilu Henner and Sela Ward both lovely to look at and very funny. Patrick Wayne plays a good-guy who is as good as Rex, and their interplay is great fun. Andy Griffith, as the wealthy cattle baron is under-utilized, because his part was drastically cut: he was supposed to be a gay cattle baron, but 1985 audiences weren’t ready for that. Incredibly, it’s shot in Almeria, Spain – Fernando Rey is included for some funny nods to Spaghetti Westerns – but looks more American than European.   


EDEN – A Film by Ron Howard

Ana de Armas, supported by Felix Kammerer 
and Ignacio Gasparini, photo by Jason Boland

Currently streaming on Prime for $19.95

(Note: I realize that Eden is not a Western, but it’s a pioneering story, about people moving away from civilization, so I say, close enough!)

The fact that it’s based on the truth notwithstanding, the premise of Eden, the very dark new film directed by Ron Howard and co-written by him with Noah Pink, could have been a wonderful comedy: post-World War I, a pompous German philosopher and his lover move to an unpopulated island in the Galapagos Archipelago, to be completely alone, to work out a plan to save humanity. And when word of his plan spreads – making them among the first media stars -- true-believers flock to join him, making his work impossible. I feel like re-writing it for Charlie Chase, or Clifton Webb!

Daniel Bruhl and Jude Law
photo by Peter Jowery

We are immediately sympathetic to Jude Law as Ritter, the philosophoid who, despite his pomposity, is trying to accomplish something important, along with Dore, played by Vanessa Kirby, who won’t even let her MS derail her. Without warning they are joined by the unwanted, unprepared and destitute Wittmer family – Margaret (Sydney Sweeney), Heinz (Daniel Bruhl) and young son Harry (Jonathan Tittel). They’re about as welcome as Blondie, Dagwood, and a tubercular Baby Dumpling. No sooner are they settled than the arrogant “Baroness”, played by Ana de Armas, arrives with her entourage of 3 lovers, and her lunatic plan to build an exclusive hotel on the island’s shore.  You have an inkling of what’s coming, as the opening titles tell us that it is a true story, as told by the survivors.

While not a popular theme in recent years, stories of “civilized” people alone on jungle islands have been the subjects of several memorable films: various versions of The Island of Dr. Moreau, The Most Dangerous Game, Lord of the Flies, Swiss Family Robinson – even comedies like The Tuttles of Tahiti. In fact, this group of castaways is the subject of a fascinating 2013 documentary, The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden, currently streaming on Amazon Prime, from directors Daniel Geller and Dayna Goldfine. Incredibly, it’s full of footage of the actual islanders, as newsreel companies and narrative filmmakers visited them. There is even a brief dramatic film starring the Baroness!

The ultimate flaw of Ron Howard’s film is that there is no one to care about. Unlike all of the fictional jungle films I’ve mentioned, there is no likable character – our sympathy for Ritter quickly dissipates. The irony is that you don’t like anyone in The Galapagos Affair either, but you don’t lose patience with that film because it’s a documentary, and the appeal is intellectual. We’ve all watched true crime stories where the victims are as hateful as the killers, but the truth, sympathetic or not, keeps our interest. But our interest in drama is not intellectual but largely emotional: we want to root for someone. The closest we come to caring is about young Harry Wittmer, and there is a promising moment between him and the Baroness, when she’s befriending him, and we immediately distrust her motives. But the set-up is never paid off. Instead, the plot becomes an uninvolving scorecard of who gets killed in what order.

Sydney Sweeney, photo by Roger Lawson

In spite of this, Ron Howard’s direction is excellent. Jude Law’s character’s deterioration, his transition from pretentious philanthropist to psychotic fascist, is Oscar-worthy wonderful. I wanted to choke de Armas’ Baroness, but I found her fascinating. Eden is beautifully photographed by Mathias Herndl, particularly the strangely ominous cutaways to the animal life on the island. We don’t see a single Galapagos Tortoise, but in fact, filming is not permitted on the islands, so it was shot in Australia.

The most powerful sequence by far is Sydney Sweeney’s character giving birth while her cabin is being burglarized, and then being attacked by blood-smelling dogs! That had me not only on the edge of my seat, but gnawing on my knuckles.

AND THAT’S A WRAP!


Please check out the September/October True West, featuring my article, A Century of Disenrollment, and my interview with author Anne Hillerman. And here’s the link to my newest INSP blog, What TV and Movies Get Right and Wrong About Cowboys.


Much obliged,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright October 2025 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

 

 

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

THE MEN WHO MADE ‘DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE’, PLUS ‘SPAGHETTI WESTERN’ LUNCH!





This past Tuesday, ‘DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE’ was released for rent and sale, and streaming on Amazon Instant Video.  It’s from producers Barry Barnholtz and Jeffrey Schenck, who previously brought you ‘WYATT EARP’S REVENGE’, and while it’s not a sequel, they are somewhat interrelated  – think how Lippert Films teamed I SHOT JESSE JAMES and I SHOT BILLY THE KID, or JESSE JAMES MEETS FRANKENSTEIN’S DAUGHTER and BILLY THE KID VERSUS DRACULA.  On second thought, don’t think of that second pair.

Actually, HOLLIDAY and EARP share some of the same real characters, and both movies focus on documented but not well-known incidents in the lives of their subjects.  But it wasn’t the history that initially suggested the story to screenwriter Rolfe Kanefsky.  It was current events.  Kanefsky, who has 37 writing and 22 directing credits, had just completed his script of BONNIE & CLYDE: JUSTIFIED, for the same producing team, and director David DeCoteau, when the HOLLIDAY story occurred to him.  His original title was STAND YOUR GROUND. 

ROLFE KANEFSKY:  It deals with Doc Holliday, the events after the shootout at the O.K. Corral, and the killing of his brother, Morgan Earp, which led to the hunt for the men responsible, on Wyatt Earp’s vendetta run.  It follows two stories that parallel and then interconnect.  Frank Stilwell, Pete Spence, Indian Charlie and a few others were charged with the murder (but were currently at large). 
Frank Stilwell in real life had some brothers and sisters.  What I created was a story where his long-lost sister and brother and father are trying to get together with him for a family reunion at Pete Spence’s ranch in Arizona.  Frank Stilwell is on the run, and gunning for Wyatt Earp.  When the family meets up, trying to reconnect, Indian Charlie, on the run after the murder, shows up at Pete Spence’s place, wounded, and they bring him in; but they don’t know who he is or what’s going on.  And Doc Holliday shows up to kill Indian Charlie, and get information on where the rest of the gang is.  At that point the family has to decide who is the good guy, and who is the bad guy, and do they give Indian Charlie up.  And is Doc Holliday working for the U.S. Marshall’s office, because there’s a posse looking for Holliday at this point.  Is he acting as a lawman or a vigilante?  We know Indian Charlie is a bad guy, but who makes the decision of what’s right and what’s wrong. 




The reality is Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp got Indian Charlie to confess before they killed him.   In many ways, the story is symbolic of the ‘Stand Your Ground’ Trayvon Martin thing that (happened) in Florida, the whole ‘use of deadly force’ question.   I took a fictionalized but real account in the history of the old west, and made it a contemporary analogy for what’s going on today.  William McNamara plays Doc.  His most famous role, he starred in CHASERS, the Dennis Hopper (directed) film with Tom Berenger. He was the killer in COPYCAT, with Sigourney Weaver.   He was also in Dario Argento’s OPERA – he’s the guy who gets stabbed through the throat.  Eric Roberts is playing Frank Stilwell’s father.  The young actress who was sort of introduced with BONNIE & CLYDE, Ashley Hayes, she plays the young sister of Frank Stilwell.  For a western, she winds up being the strongest character in the whole piece; sort of the focal point, which is unusual. 

The scenes with her and Doc Holliday are really where you get into what’s right and what’s wrong.  At one point he says to her, “Sometimes the only way to stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.”  And she says, “Yeah, but who gets to decide who’s the good man and who’s the bad man?”  “In this situation, it’s me.”  And you can take whatever side you want on the issue.  It does imply that the legal system doesn’t always work.  And, especially in the old west, if more people were convicted of certain crimes they couldn’t hold them on, then people might not have taken these personal vendettas, and there wouldn’t have been so much bloodshed. I think (the story) became much more powerful, definitely influenced by the events that were going on at the time. And it’s the first time I’ve ever written a western. 

When I discussed the project with Rolfe, it was several months ago.  The film was largely in the can (on the chip?), but there were still a few more days to shoot, and one major role had yet to be cast.  I spoke to director David DeCoteau just a week before the film’s release.  David is an astonishingly prolific director, with 115 feature films to his credit.  He’s best known for his horror films like CREEPOZOIDS and PUPPET MASTER III, but he’s also done tons of crime films, family pictures, campy comedies, Christmas romances, and a couple of talking animal films. 



DAVID DECOTEAU: I’m really proud of the movie; I’m really proud of the whole project. 

HENRY PARKE: How long did you shoot it?

DAVID DECOTEAU: (Laughs) I’m really not supposed to say.  But call it a  Monogram or P.R.C. shooting schedule, and I’m sure the people who read the Round-up will probably know what that means. 

HENRY PARKE:  I know you’ve often given credit to a pair of legendary producers for helping you start your career, Roger Corman and Charles Band.  How did you meet them, and how did they influence you?

DAVID DECOTEAU: I was writing fan-letters to Roger Corman when I was a teenager (in Portland, 
Oregan), and his assistant at the time was Gale Ann Hurd, who went on to be a big-time producer( TERMINATOR, ALIENS, THE WALKING DEAD). She said, “Look, if you ever come to Los Angeles I’ll set up a meeting – you should really meet Roger.”  I came down to L.A. when I was 16, and he took a meeting with me, for a couple of hours.  He was very sweet, very helpful.  I think he was impressed with me.  He said, ‘Whenever you I move to L.A. I’ll put you to work.’  I ended up moving to L.A. when I was 18.  He put me on a movie called GALAXY OF TERROR as a production assistant.  It was an interesting group of people.  Bill Paxton (TITANIC, APOLLO 13) was a carpenter on the set. James Cameron (director of TITANIC, AVATAR) was the art director.  We were all just starting our careers.  I was only with him for four or five months.  To move up you had to work there for years.  So I moved on, and worked for Wim Wenders, Ken Russell.  Then I got some money together and directed my first feature, which was DREAMANIAC (1986).  It was a nice little first movie, but it was enough to get me going.  It was during the VHS explosion.  They needed you to make a lot of movies back then, and I did.  Not just horror movies; I worked in all the genres.  It was Charlie Band who cofinanced that movie with me, and it worked out quite nicely.  I worked with him on and off for several years with various companies. 




I did direct an all-female (sci-fi)western actually, called PETTICOAT PLANET (1996).  Which I shot in Romania on the sets of OBLIVION (1994)which my friend Sam Irvin was directing – we shot on the same sets.  It was funny and sexy and campy, and a lot of fun.  They still had western props and wardrobe from a western made in the ‘70s.  It’s interesting how there have been so many westerns made all over the world.  Obviously Spain, Italy, Israel.  I’ve worked with a lot of actors who’ve done western in the past.  I directed James Coburn in a film called SKELETONS.  And just recently the western genre has really taken off.  I don’t know if I’d callBONNIE & CLYDE: JUSTIFIED a western…

HENRY PARKE:  It’s got a lot of the same rural appeal. 

DAVID DECOTEAU:  I did it for Lionsgate, and Barry Barnholtz seemed happy with it, and they 
offered me DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE.  But I had developed the script on my own as a very small, contained western drama.  I didn’t want a lot of action.  I wanted a character piece with a very small cast.  We had the role of the judge that still needed to be shot.  We’d shot everything with Eric Roberts and Robert McNamara, and some young actors, Ashley Hayes, Oliver Rayon, Randy Burrell, all actors I’ve worked with.  But I still needed the judge, so I called Merle Haggard.  So I closed the deal with Merle Haggard, but then there was a death in his family, and he really could not find the time to do it.  Which was unfortunate because I had grown up on Merle Haggard’s music.  So I ended up going to Tom Berenger.  I shot Tom Berenger’s scene in South Carolina.  The majority of the film was shot at the old Cecil B. DeMille movie ranch.  It’s now called Indian Springs Movie ranch, but it’s an old movie ranch from the silent days.  I spent another day shooting with William McNamara in another movie ranch in Canyon Country; did a lot of wide vista shots.




HENRY PARKE:  I did see the Vasquez Rocks come in there.

DAVID DECOTEAU: Yuh, we had a couple of shots of Vasquez Rock and Bronson Caves as well.  I tried to populate the movie with as many iconic western locations as I could find. 

HENRY PARKE:  I’d talked to Rolfe Kanefsky a few months ago, about how the Trayvon Martin case was the impetus for DOC HOLLIDAY, which was originally STAND YOUR GROUND.  How did one real event influence the dramatizing of another real event?

DAVID DECOTEAU: It’s all Rolfe.  Rolfe is a very gifted writer, who does a lot of research, especially with telling true stories.  He’d just come off BONNIE & CLYDE, where he’d had to do a lot of research there.  And he found this story, and it just rang true to him, because what was going on in the news was the whole Trayvon Martin story, and it was shockingly similar.  And even though it was a period western, he thought it was timely to tell this story.  I thought it was a clever idea as well.

HENRY PARKE: Despite the ‘all characters are imaginary’ boilerplate at the end of the movie, Doc Holliday, the Stillwells and Florentino Cruz, alias Indian Charlie are certainly real, and the plot is based on fact.  Why did you choose to tell this story out of Doc’s life?

DAVID DECOTEAU: Well, we had not seen it before, and we thought it would be clever.  And I wanted to do something intimate, rather than an epic western.  Rolfe is a director as well, and he always writes movies from a director’s point of view.  And especially from working in independent, modestly budgeted genre pictures, he knows how to write something that’s do-able. 

HENRY PARKE:  It was an interesting choice, having Berrenger’s Judge narrate the story on-screen, so the story is told almost as an interview, or in the context of a law-school lecture.  What made you think to do it that way?

DAVID DECOTEAU: That was Rolfe.  I wanted to incorporate a judge into the movie as more of a story-teller.  And Berenger has had his experience playing real characters over the years, and he just had that kind of authority, that gravitas, to make that work.  We did rewrite that a little, so he had more to say and more to do once we had Berenger. 

HENRY PARKE:  And it was great to get him just coming off his HATFIELDS & MCCOYS Emmy.

DAVID DECOTEAU: It was a real coupe.  He really liked the material; he really liked that I was coming to him, so he didn’t have to get on a plane.  He had just finished SNIPER 5 in Bulgaria, and really didn’t want to get onto a plane anytime soon, and I made the offer, “Hey, I’ll come to you.”  It was tough for him to say no, and we went right out to South Carolina, where he lives.  We shot him there, with his judge’s robes, and the glasses are from when he played Teddy Roosevelt in ROUGH RIDERS.  He brought them with him, and said, “These seem appropriate.  What do you think?” 




HENRY PARKE:  I think this is your eighth time directing Eric Roberts.     

DAVID DECOTEAU: Eric and his wife Eliza are good friends of mine.  I worked with Eric like twelve years ago on a movie called THE WOLVES OF WALL STREET – not to be confused with THE WOLF OF WALL STREET.  And we had a great time working together, so whenever I have anything appropriate for him, I give him a call.  He’s a really nice guy, a solid actor.  I loved him in STAR 80 and RUNAWAY TRAIN – just really great performances.  Same thing with Willy McNamara – we’ve done a lot of films together, and he’s happy to be there. 

HENRY PARKE:  Ashley Hayes, a stunning redhead, is the only woman in the film.

DAVID DECOTEAU: She was my Bonnie in BONNIE & CLYDE, and I like working with her.  She’s an up-and-comer, relatively new, and I want to help her any way I can, because she’s a star, and will probably be taking off soon.  I got her two Lionsgate movies.  She’s also managed by James Garner’s daughter, Gigi Garner, a very good friend of mine.  One thing about Ashley is she’s timeless; she doesn’t have a modern look.  That’s why I thought she would be great for that part.

HENRY PARKE:  Almost all of the action takes place in one location, the farm, over a brief period of time – there are obvious parallels to THE PETRIFIED FOREST, DESPERATE HOURS or NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.  What are the pluses and minuses to that sort of structure?

DAVID DECOTEAU:  It becomes more of a play, especially if there is more dialogue and less action.  Your canvas is smaller, more contained.  But that hotbox environment can be used dramatically, too.  It’s also helpful because I was very familiar with that location, because I’d shot a few films there.  And as Rolfe was writing, he was also familiar with it, so he could write for it. 

HENRY PARKE: Did you grow up with westerns?  Which were your favorites as a kid? 

DAVID DECOTEAU:  You know, I was not necessarily a huge fan of westerns, although I did see the classics on television.  My father was actually a full-blooded American Indian.  (Chuckles) But he was a John Wayne fan, and whenever he was seeing a cowboy and Indian movie, he was always rooting for the cowboy.  And he loved Gene Autry movies.  That’s the household I grew up in. 

HENRY PARKE:  What is your tribal affiliation?

 DAVID DECOTEAU: My father, who passed away on New Year’s Eve at the age of 88 was Chippewa. I am an adoptee which qualifies me as 50% native America. My birth heritage is Scandinavian. 

HENRY PARKE:  Do you have any favorite westerns today?

DAVID DECOTEAU:  I love John Wayne.  I loved RED RIVER because it’s interesting and complicated.  I love SHANE.  I love Clint Eastwood’s UNFORGIVEN.  I even like some of the more exploitive ones like CUTTHROATS NINE.  Because I like to mix the genres a little, and I like when something becomes more than one thing.  I liked anything with Lee Van Cleef.  Jimmy Stewart.  I like Leone, especially casting Henry Fonda as a bad guy – that was brilliant.  I like it when it’s unexpected and complicated and androgynous.  The genre is so open and so different that you can wrap a western around any story.  That’s why I want to make more westerns.  I did a western, a very quick micro-budget western called 1313 BILLY THE KID, and I really enjoyed it.  But the original plan was to shoot that in Almeria, Spain.  And if I am going to do another western I would like to do it in Almeria’s standing backlots.  It’s nice to make those movies on sacred ground; it kind of makes everyone get into the moment. 

HENRY PARKE:  It’s like going to Monument Valley.

DAVID DECOTEAU:  Exactly!


SPAGHETTI WESTERN LUNCH CRAMS ‘EM IN LIKE PEPPERONI!

Robert Woods, Brett Halsey, Robert Forster


This past Wednesday’s ‘A Word on Westerns’ luncheon at the Autry drew an overflow crowd to eat pasta – and the occasional pulled pork sandwich – and to listen to the fond memories of stars of the genre .  After a greeting by Maxine Hansen of Gene Autry Enterprises, host Rob Word introduced Robert Woods and Brett Halsey, who reminisced about their days in the Almeria sagebrush.  Woods is known for films like STARBLACK (1968) and EL PURO (1969) Read my interview with Robert Woods HERE .


Rob Word with Robert Woods


 Brett Hallsey starred in TODAY WE KILL, TOMORROW WE DIE (1968) and ROY COLT AND WINCHESTER JACK (1970) among others, and recently starred in the excellent SCARLET WORM (read my review HERE . )


Brett Halsey


Both men, already established actors in the U.S. when they went overseas in the 1960s, had trouble hanging onto their identities, or rather, their names.  Robert kept seeing his last name change from Woods to Wood and back again, at the whim of the filmmakers.  Brett, disappointed in a movie, appeared under the pseudonym Montgomery Ford, and when the movie was a hit, Montgomery Ford became his name on everything.   The discussions were all videotaped by Rob Word’s crew, and you’ll be seeing clips here as soon as they are posted. 

If things go as planned, come September both men will be back in Almeria, Spain, to shoot RESURRECTION OF EL PURO.  Woods would also soon be in Italy to film THE SONS OF NICHOLAS Z, a ‘romanzo Calabrese.’ 



Also speaking were Tom Betts of the site Westerns…AllItaliana,  discussing the challenges on tracking down movies that were often never officially released in the U.S.  Bill Lustig, president of Blue Underground described his adventures acquiring and restoring the best of the genre – on Saturday Courtney Joyner and I were providing commentary for his newest release, COMPANEROS from Sergio Corbucci.  The last man to take the microphone was Martin Kove, of KARATE KID fame, an actor passionately committed to the western who will soon be seen in SIX GUN SAVIOR.  Though never having made westerns in Europe, he told a very funny story about meeting Sergio Leone, and another about the lengths he went to interest Israeli filmmakers in doing a western. 



Top row - Martin Kove, Rob Word, Robert Woods, Brett Hallsey
front - Tom Betts, Bill Lustig


Also in the audience were Robert Forster, Darby Hinton, who played Dan’l’s son Israel in DANIEL BOONE, and is soon to be seen in TEXAS RISING, and Butch Patrick, little Eddie Munster, who also did DEATH VALLEY DAYS, BONANZA, RAWHIDE and two GUNSMOKES.  July’s Third Wednesday of the Month will focus on comic books and Westerns, and I’ll have details as the date gets closer.


JUST BACK FROM ‘COMPANEROS’ COMMENTARY




BLUE UNDERGROUND has again flattered C. Courtney Joyner and myself by inviting us to do a commentary track on their new version of Sergio Corbucci’s ‘COMPANEROS’. Great fun, watching a one of Corbucci’s finest works, with flawless picture and audio quality, clever plotting, and terrific actors like Franco Nero, Tomas Milian, Jack Palance, Fernando Rey and Iris Berben.

THAT'S A WRAP!

It's three A.M.!  I'm hittin' the hay!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright June 2014 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved




Sunday, March 23, 2014

GERMAN WESTERN ‘GOLD’ REVIEWED, PLUS ‘DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE’ FIRST LOOK!



GOLD – A Film Review





When I heard that a new German-made Western had just been completed, “…visions of Winnetou danced in my head!”  Though most Americans are not aware of it, Germany has a long history of American Western story-telling, Karl May being the most popular Western writer in the world, easily eclipsing American Western writers from Max Brand to Louis L’amour with his non-English-language following. 


Emily and Carl


German Western film, likewise not well known in the States, has been tremendously influential.  The success of a dozen Karl May Western films made in the early 1960s, starring French actor Pierre Brice as Apache Chief Winnetou, opposite American and British actors like Lex Barker, Rod Cameron and Stewart Granger, were such a smash that they inspired the Italians to create the Spaghetti Western genre.  

GOLD, written and directed by Thomas Arslan, could not be further from the melodrama of WINNETOU, but that is by design.  It is a movie that strives for realism and naturalism.  Filmed where the tale is set, in British Columbia, Canada, GOLD surprisingly is not a gold-field story, ala the recent miniseries KLONDIKE, but a tale of people on their way to the gold-fields.  Near the turn of the century, when an improbably large nugget is found by a panner, Argonauts head for the Klondike, and fortune, anyway they can.   (When I saw Indians waiting at the railroad's end, wrapped in blankets with the distinctive design of the Hudson Bay Company, I knew that production designer Reinheld Blaschke knew his stuff. )



German-born Wilhelm Lasser (Peter Kurth), an experienced guide, advertises his services to other German-Americans, assembles five prospective prospectors and, with wrangler Carl Boehmer (Marco Mandic), sets out for glory. Among them is Emily Meyer, who has tired of being a house-maid in New York.  She’s played by Nina Hoss, a major star in German cinema who, appropriate to the role, bears a striking resemblance to Lillian Gish, who frequently played pioneers for D. W. Griffith; not by chance, Hoss wears her hair in the same distinctive manner.

Tension builds, a bit, as the travelers begin to suspect that wagon-master Lasser is no master at all.  He becomes upset when they reach a river that’s not on his map.  It’s almost as if he’s never been there before.  In fact, he’s greatly exaggerated his experience, and it is only through the assistance of the occasional Indian, for a five-dollar payment, that they stay anywhere near on the path.  Further, as we see at around the half-hour mark, in a scene that calls to mind Hemingway’s THE KILLERS, a pair of riders is tracking the group, or rather the wrangler.  It’s a scene with both menace and humor, and it’s about all we see of either element. Because the major flaw of this film is that, beautifully made though it is, not nearly enough happens.  



There is hardship aplenty, but damned little conflict.  The characters are so stoic that they never get impassioned enough about anything to get the viewer involved.  Cinematographer Patrick Orth makes the most of the varied and beautiful forests and vistas of British Columbia – much of the photography is spectacular, especially a scene in a forest of barren trees.  But there are so few close-ups that the viewer rarely has the sense that he knows what a character is thinking.  While the wide-screen process – the image here is more than twice as wide as it is tall – is perfect for landscape, when it comes to actors, as Leone taught us, you have to jam the camera all the way into the center of a face to fill the screen.  We never get half that close.  And I don’t ever recall seeing a movie where more screen-time is spent watching a small group of riders ride across the screen, over and over again.

In a ‘Ten Little Indians’ manner, their numbers drop.  Some give up; one goes mad, strips off his clothes and runs pell-mell into the forest.  In one of the most affecting scenes, a man’s injured leg must be amputated before gangrene sets in.  The use of sound rather than gory visuals is evocative and effective.  Finally we get a sense of passion, and the stoicism is truly moving.  But sadly we quickly soon lose him.  We also get one good shoot-out, but it’s a long time coming.     



If you’ve seen MEEK’S CUTOFF (2010), starring Michelle Greene, Bruce Greenwood and Paul Dano, this may all sound familiar; that film also involves an incompetent wagon-master leading a group of pioneers, and getting them lost.  But while MEEK’S had Rod Rondeaux as the menacing Indian following them, and a dramatic payoff, in GOLD, once we meet the men following the wrangler, they disappear until too late in the story to save it. 

The score by Dylan Carson is portentous and effective, but is often missing in scenes where it could have helped.  And not one of the voice-actors chosen to dub the film into English uses a German accent, a strange choice considering how much their ‘Germanness’ is a part of their character, and how everyone they meet immediately knows they are German.

GOLD will be available in May from Screen Media Films.


‘DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE’ FIRST LOOK!

June 17th will see the release of DOC HOLLIDAY’S REVENGE, from two very talented and prolific filmmakers, writer Rolfe Kanefsky and director/producer David DeCoteau (pronounced ‘Dakota’).  It’s exec produced by Barry Barnholtz (see my interview HERE  ) and Jeffrey Schenck, who previously produced WYATT EARP’S REVENGE among many other Westerns. 

The film features the very talented and busy Eric Roberts, and Tom Berenger, who won the Outstanding Supporting Actor EMMY for 2012’s HATFIELDS & MCCOYS. 

I’ll be sharing my interview with Kanefsky soon, but in the meantime, here’s the first trailer.




ANTHONY MANN RETROSPECTIVE ENDS SUNDAY 3/30



The final program of the UCLA/Billy Wilder Theater two-month retrospective entitled Dark City, Open Country: The Films of Anthony Mann, will be MAN OF THE WEST (1958) and THE TIN STAR (1957).


SEE YOU AT THE ‘COWBOY FESTIVAL’ APRIL 26 & 27!



After attending the Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival and covering it for the Round-up these last three years, this year I’ll be a participant!  At the OutWest Buckaroo Book Shop, in the heart of Veluzat's Melody Ranch’s fabulous Western street, I’ll be moderating a couple of authors’ panels.  On Saturday from 1:30 to 2, the topic is THE WEST IMAGINED, and I’ll be talking with Western novelists Edward M. Erdelac, author of COYOTE’S TRAIL; Jim Christina, author of THE DARK ANGEL; and C. Courtney Joyner, author of SHOTGUN.

And on Sunday, from 1:30 to 2, the topic is THE WEST LIVED, and I’ll be talking to non-fiction writers Jerry Nickle, great-grandson of the Sundance Kid; JR Sanders, author of SOME GAVE ALL; and Peter Sherayko, author of TOMBSTONE – THE GUNS AND GEAR. 

On Saturday at 12:30, and Sunday at 2:30, I’ll be chatting with Miles Swarthout, who wrote the screenplay for THE SHOOTIST from his father, Glendon Swarthout’s novel.  Miles is also involved with the upcoming movie THE HOMESMAN, directed by and starring Tommy Lee Jones, from a novel by Glendon Swarthout.  You can learn all about the events at the Buckaroo Book Shop by going HERE.  


ADOPT A BURRO AT TRONA CENTENNIAL MARCH 28-30!

The mining town of Trona in San Bernadino County’s Searles Valley marks its first century with a historical symposium, parade, car show, street fair, and on-site Bureau Of Land Management Wild Burro adoption!  Learn more by calling 760-372-4091.


HAPPY BIRTHDAY ‘RED SUN’ STAR URSULA ANDRESS!


Ursula Andress & Alain Delon in RED SUN


The first gorgeous Bond Girl turns 78 today! She starred in THREE Westerns -- RED SUN, 4 FOR TEXAS, and mexico on fire -- but to me she’ll always be SHE! When I was ten or eleven, and madly in love with her, she was in New York for the premiere. I had this goofy idea to send flowers to her hotel – I had no idea what it would cost – I called MGM’s New York office to find out where she was staying, AND THEY PUT HER ON THE PHONE TO ME! I’ve never fully recovered. Happy Birthday!


THAT’S A WRAP!

Have a great week! 

Happy Trails,

Henry


All Original Contents Copyright March 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved