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List Price: $19.98
Amazon.com's Price: $17.49
You Save: $2.49 (12%)
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Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours



Average Rating:  out of 5 stars


Editorial Review:

Product Description:
TWO FRIENDS HIRED TO POLICE A SMALL TOWN THAT IS SUFFERING UNDER THE RULE OF A RANCHER FIND THEIR JOB COMPLICATED BY THE ARRIVAL OF A YOUNG WIDOW.

Amazon.com:
The Western has been an endangered species, on and off, for something like 40 years now. Welcome to Appaloosa, Ed Harris's film of the Robert B. Parker novel--first because it exists at all, but even more because Harris as star, director, and co-screenwriter (with Robert Knott) has managed to bring it to the screen with no hint of fuss or strain, as if the making of no-nonsense, copiously pleasurable Westerns were still something Hollywood did with regularity. Harris plays Virgil Cole, one of those ace gunfighter-lawmen whose name need only be mentioned to make a saloon go still. Cole and his shotgun-toting partner Everett Hitch (Viggo Mortensen) accept a commission to enforce law and order in the New Mexico town of Appaloosa. That basically means protect it from rapacious rancher Randall Bragg (Jeremy Irons, looking right at home on the range), who murdered the previous town marshal like swatting a fly. Life becomes complicated when, about the time Bragg has been jailed to await trial, a fancy-dressing piano player calling herself Mrs. French (Renée Zellweger) steps down off the train. Cole commences to have feelings, and as he ruefully reminds Hitch, "Feelin's can get ya killed."

In his second directorial effort (following the 2000 biopic Pollock), Harris takes his cue from novelist Parker's often deadpan-comic touch, allowing action and character to accumulate in accordance with an overall eccentric rhythm. (The film's main disappointment is that it would benefit from more running time to allow things to stew a bit longer, especially in the second half.) The character work is choice, from the moment Tom Bower, James Gammon, and Timothy Spall step into view as Appaloosa's civic leaders; the director's father Bob Harris contributes a cameo as a mellifluous-tongued circuit judge, and an age-thickened Lance Henriksen turns up midfilm as gunman Ring Shelton, trailing affability and menace. In collaboration with Dances With Wolves cameraman Dean Semler, Harris sets up shots and scenes in such a way that we often see into and out of Appaloosa's various buildings simultaneously, to excellent dramatic and atmospheric effect, and there's a thrillingly vertical dynamics to a scene involving a train at an isolated water stop. The action is lethal when it needs to be, but never dwelt upon. "That was over quick," Hitch observes after one gun battle. Cole's response says it all: "Everybody could shoot." --Richard T. Jameson





Related Items:

Features:
  • In Marshal Virgil Cole and deputy Everett Hitchs line of work, you shoot quick, you shoot clean, and you reload straightaway. No remorse. No looking back. No feelings. Feelings get you killed. Paired as rivals in A History of Violence, Ed Harris (who also directs, produces and co-scripts) and Viggo Mortensen stand together as longtime friends and for-hire peacekeepers Cole and Hitch in this charac
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Brand: NEW LINE HOME VIDEO
EAN: 0794043127816
Feature: In Marshal Virgil Cole and deputy Everett Hitchs line of work, you shoot quick, you shoot clean, and you reload straightaway. No remorse. No looking back. No feelings. Feelings get you killed. Paired as rivals in A History of Violence, Ed Harris (who also directs, produces and co-scripts) and Viggo Mortensen stand together as longtime friends and for-hire peacekeepers Cole and Hitch in this charac
Format: Color, DVD, Widescreen, Subtitled, Full Screen, NTSC
Label: New Line Home Video
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageDolby Digital 5.1EnglishSubtitledSpanishSubtitled
Manufacturer: New Line Home Video
MPN: 1000045162
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: New Line Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: January 13, 2009
Running Time: 115 minutes
Studio: New Line Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: 2008

Customer Reviews

yecch 1 out of 5 stars
This show was boring, slow, inaccurate as apaloosas are in the north not the south. I realize that this useage was just the name of the town.
I was hoping that the show was about horsea and assumed so, trusting that I had enjoyed other shows with these actors in the past.
I did not like that the heroes both fell for Renee (with her bulbous fake-looking lips) even though it was obvious that she was a sleezey character. I like her better in comedy. I like both Viggo and Ed in other ... Read More


 







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