Thursday, August 4, 2011

Cowboys & Aliens



Maybe, it’s just that I really enjoy western’s, but I would’ve been satisfied with Cowboys & Aliens, had the extraterrestrials never showed up. There’s something that I just love about the simplistic, visceral rawness of an old western movie set, it could be the notion that with less lucrative sets it puts the actors talents at the foreground or that I’m nostalgic and enjoy being transported back to another time. Whatever it is, when you bring together talented individuals like Daniel Craig, Harrison Ford, Jon Favreau, and Steven Spielberg you’re definitely in for something very cool.

The plot of the movie goes like this: a spaceship arrives one night in a settlement in Arizona, with it comes epic destruction and many disappearances. A short time before this apocalyptic night a stranger jaunts into town, with a boldness and swagger about him that the townspeople take notice of. He is Jake Lonergan, played by Daniel Craig, but he’s suffering from a strange amnesia as he doesn’t know who he is, how he came to be in this place, and what the contraption on his wrist is. Lonergan’s boldness is put on display as he stands up to Percy Dolarhyde, acted well by Paul Dano, the son of Colonel Woodrow Dolarhyde, cattle baron and the driving force of Absolution’s economy. Dolarhyde senior is of course portrayed by Harrison Ford, and when he gets word of his son being thrown into the clink he isn’t pleased. Couple that with the news of farmhands vanishing and missing, burnt and mutilated cattle and Dolarhyde is grumpy as hell. Dolarhyde confronts Sheriff John Taggart, but he doesn’t budge on his decision to send Percy off to face his judgment. But, all of this is interrupted by a bright red light on the horizon, which leads to bodies being snatched by “demons in flying machines”.

I don’t want to give too much else away, but Spielberg, Orci, Kurtzman, Lindelof, and company have crafted a very solid screenplay that ties together well. Spielberg is definitely one of Hollywood’s masters of science fiction, so I can speculate that his insight on how the extraterrestrials should look and move was extremely valuable. The only flaw I wondered about after seeing the movie, that I’m sure was discussed at production meetings was how on Earth did those cowboys survive a full on battle against aliens with “atom scrambling” weaponry, with only some dynamite, an alliance with some of the natives, and their trusty six-shooters (The answer is truthfully, they would’ve been pulverized and there wouldn’t of been any American history post 1879). Alas, this is just fiction, and of course you’ve got to root for the good guys, no matter how insurmountable the odds.

But, although not many critics and moviegoers enjoyed Cowboys & Aliens, I did. I wouldn’t crown it movie of the summer” or anything like that, but I’d recommend watching it to anybody who enjoys science fiction or Daniel Craig. I do realize that, that isn’t the most sweeping endorsement, but the movie didn’t really have that “It” factor that movies like Men in Black or Independence Day had in spades.

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