Genre:
Crime/Western Director: James Mangold Cast: Russell Crowe, Christian Bale, Logan
Lerman, Dallas Roberts, Ben Foster, Peter Fonda, Vinessa Shaw,
Alan Tudyk, Luce Rains, Gretchen Mol Runtime: 1 hr 57 mins Released By: Encore Films Rating: PG Official Website:http://www.encorefilms.com/310toyuma.html
Opening Day: 17 January 2008
Synopsis:
Infamous outlaw Ben Wade (Russell Crowe) and his vicious gang
of thieves and murderers have plagued the Southern Railroad.
When Wade is captured, Civil War veteran Dan Evans (Christian
Bale), struggling to survive on his drought-plagued ranch,
volunteers to deliver him alive to the "3:10 to Yuma",
a train that will take the killer to trial. On the trail,
Evans and Wade, each from very different worlds, begin to
earn each other’s respect. But with Wade’s outfit
on their trail – and dangers at every turn – the
mission soon becomes a violent, impossible journey toward
each man's destiny.
Movie Review:
Westerns have never had much mainstream appeal – even
when Clint Eastwood was directing them – but if there
was ever a chance one might experience commercial success,
it will likely be “3:10 to Yuma,” a remake of
the 1957 Glenn Ford classic starring two of the best actors
in the business and helmed by the director of “Walk
the Line.” Westerns have become so infrequent in the
last decade that one would be hard-pressed not to admit it's
a dying genre. Stories of shootouts, thieves, cowboys and
saloons of the Old West are today antiquated, overly conventional
and dried-up in mainstream cinema. Because there seems to
be a lack of relevancy in films of this ilk, filmmakers brave
enough to attempt one better have something special up their
sleeve in order to set themselves apart from the crowd. But
unlike other modern attempts, this is not an action film set
in the West but a proper western. The tale focuses primarily
on the choices and actions of a small band of men as they
travel through canyons, trails and rickety-shacked towns.
The key elements to the success of this film are incredibly
simplistic.
Ben
Wade (Russell Crowe) is a bad man living a good life. He knows
and darn it if he doesn’t really care. All that matters
is that his men, especially cold-blooded right-hand man Charlie
Prince (Ben Foster), continue to follow him and that their
scores robbing stage coaches and locomotives keeps filling
his pockets with coin. As for disagreements, he’s not
worried. After all, that’s what bullets are for. Dan
Evans (Christian Bale) is a good man in a bad situation. The
former Union sharpshooter is behind on his debts, his family’s
future on their desolate farm very much in jeopardy. Wife
Alice (Gretchen Mol) tries to be supportive whilst youngest
son Mark (Benjamin Petry) continues to look up to his father
even with all the adversity. The same can’t be said
for the man’s eldest boy William (Logan Lerman), however,
the budding young man unable to comprehend his superior’s
continued supposed timidity in the face of all hardships assaulting
them. These two opposite men with polarizing views on how
to live their lives are thrust together when Wade is captured
by the law. Offered enough money to get himself free of debt,
Dan joins the posse escorting the outlaw to the township of
Contention and be securely placed on the 3:10 train to Yuma
Prison. But doing it will not be easy, especially with William
secretly tagging along and Charlie and the rest of the gang
dogging their every step. Yet Dan is a man of his word. With
people falling like swatted flies or fleeing away from the
task like a scared colony of ants, this farmer feels responsible
for doing exactly what it is he said he would. Even when the
world turns against him he will not fail in the task, and
with all guns blazing to stop him Dan Evans, a good man whom
life has delivered a few too many bad apples, will make sure
admitted bad man Ben Wade gets on that train to Yuma no matter
what.
Of
the two leads, Christian Bale is saddled with the less showy
role of Dan Evans. Bale, one of today's most chameleonic actors,
lives up to the script requirements as he portrays a man tired
of barely squeaking by in life and, with his family's welfare
in the forefront of his mind, willing to risk everything for
a chance at the financial security that has forever eluded
him. However, it is Russell Crowe's stellar work as morally
questionable convict Ben Wade that overpowers Bale. Crowe,
a powerful, riveting force even in whispers, is the one performer
who enriches the depth of his character beyond what on the
written page is as much a stock figure as the rest of them.
Watching Ben, who claims to be a cold-hearted murderer but
begins to sympathize with Dan's personal plight, is a treat
as Crowe gives life to him. In supporting turns, Logan Lerman
is capable but bland as the impressionable William, and Ben
Foster adds another notch to his belt depicting an oily creep
as uninhibited psychopath Charlie Prince.
The
screenplay written by Halsted Welles and writing partners
Michael Brandt and Derek Hass deftly develops these remarkable
characters deviating quite a bit from the screenplay of the
original to expand upon the father-son relationship in a way
that starts off a bit trite (though certainly authentic) and
morphs into something truly admirable and incredibly special.
The character triangle provides an incredibly powerful series
of interactions and growth potential for all three that elevates
this from a good-guy vs. bad guy story into one where the
true complexities of the grays between good and bad manifest
in thought-provoking ways.
Most
people tend to believe that people can change for the better
when inspired by the right recipe of circumstances. Hollywood
provides so few stories where the black and white of the souls
of men are not as obvious as the colors of their Stetsons
and the culmination of the film's efforts are the good guy
plunging the bad guy off the 30th story balcony with his body
ending up impaled on some sharp object. 3:10 to Yuma puts
forth a different proposition; and, in so doing, elevates
itself out of the cliché and into a realm where the
improbable become possible.
Movie
Rating:
(310 to Yuma breaths life back into the western genre. With
all the bullets flying and men running, it's worth the ride
through)