Marc Young
March 8th, 2004, 01:17 AM
Because of the trailers and previews, I skipped this one at the theaters. Mea culpa. Thought it would be sappy, with Ron Howard directing. But he did a good job with the story, and so did his cinematographer, Salvatore Totino. Lovely shots of the southwest US, and it appears most of it was done on location (New Mexico). The dvd looks strikingly good. You can call me a sucker for liking action movies with real dialog and strongly developed characters. Is this as good as The Searchers? No, but that film is a classic. It takes several decades to assess where a film stands, historically speaking.
There is a bonus disc with interviews and a making-of featurette, but I'll probably watch it in the next few weeks. Too much to catch up on, including the very interesting Walk on the Wild Side (1962), with Laurence Harvey and Jane Fonda. This is a fascinating B&W film, and you'll be impressed with the look and feel the moment you start watching. The black cat fighting another alley cat, and the cool music. Great shadow lighting. It makes you long for the great days of B&W film, and the film noir look.
There is a bonus disc with interviews and a making-of featurette, but I'll probably watch it in the next few weeks. Too much to catch up on, including the very interesting Walk on the Wild Side (1962), with Laurence Harvey and Jane Fonda. This is a fascinating B&W film, and you'll be impressed with the look and feel the moment you start watching. The black cat fighting another alley cat, and the cool music. Great shadow lighting. It makes you long for the great days of B&W film, and the film noir look.