Why do they DO that? This bold, handsome, and wildly entertaining PG-13 romp, also contains nasty hints of cannibalism, some cold-blooded stabbings, and heartless, point-blank gunshots! Not like the thrilling days of yesteryear....
This entire story is told in flashback. In 1933 San Francisco, a boy goes into a Wild West show where he sees three life-size dioramas: an American buffalo, a grizzly bear, and a "Noble Savage," which turns out to be an elderly Tonto, who comes to life and immediately starts lying to him. The boy knows his legends though, and argues back. Brilliant makeup, by the way!
Director Gore Verbinski ("Pirates of the Caribbean") swings wildly between a goofy white horse that seems to be right out of "Cat Ballou," to a poignant love story that left us wanting more. He wisely sent his two stars, city slickers both, to boot camp so they wouldn't embarrass themselves in a Western, although as I recall, Hammer DOES mount a patient horse from the wrong side early on. I guess no one in the crew noticed....
These guys are workin' it:
I mentally divided this 2 1/2-hour PG-13 outing into five sections: The first 30 minutes tell us how an icon is created; it is laugh-out-loud funny and ends with a rousing rendition of the William Tell Overture, which as we know is our hero's theme song. The second section includes the tragic massacre of an Indian tribe: men, women and children. The center section is again wildly funny; followed by about 30 minutes that feature more murders and mayhem. The final action-filled section (with an encore of the William Tell Overture) takes place on moving trains and contains slapstick and sight gags that could have been created by Buster Keaton, which is a GOOD thing.
I feel so sad because I would LOVE to recommend this without exception. Maybe if you go get popcorn during the icky parts? (I WILL probably own the DVD because of the funny and poignant scenes; Armie Hammer is wonderful.) Sigh....
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