THE
ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT
FORD
Publicity
Stills of
"Assassination of Jesse James"
(Courtesy from Warner Bros)
Genre: Action/Adventure and Western Director: Andrew Dominik Cast: Brad Pitt, Casey Affleck, Sam Shepard,
Mary-Louise Parker, Jeremy Renner, Paul Schneider, Sam Rockwell RunTime:
2 hrs 40 mins Released By: Warner Bros Rating: NC-16 (Some Violence and Brief Sexual
References) Official Website:http://www.jessejamesmovie.com
Opening Day: 24 January 2008
Synopsis:
An
action western surrounding the private life and public exploits
of America's most notorious outlaw, Jesse James. As the charismatic
and unpredictable outlaw plans his next great robbery, he
wages war on his enemies, who are trying to collect the reward
money--and the glory--that is riding on his capture. However,
the greatest threat to Jesse's life may ultimately come from
those he trusts the most.
Movie Review:
The dissipations of facades and masquerades come to the fore
in the ponderously titled “The Assassination of Jesse
James by the Coward Robert Ford”. Jesse James (Brad
Pitt) tempers his blood reign over railroads and dusty towns
with his guise as charming businessman Thomas Howard, substituting
his inherent savagery for normalcy, gunslinging for churchgoing
and gang for family. But that life will always be too much
to ask from the restless James. A lifetime of cruelty and
lawlessness leaves him the desire for martyrdom, one lasting
act of infamy. Robert Ford (a pitch perfect Casey Affleck),
the sycophantic young upstart to James’ gang and driven
by his idolatry of his waning hero in James, seeks celebrity
in the same way he incites it by introducing himself as a
man "destined for great things". The eventual evanescence
of this romanticised illusion leads to the nascent of pride
and envy. The sudden act of psychosis (arguably by both parties)
that leads to the film’s key marquee placement triggers
the celebrity Ford craves which at once dispels the myth of
both men while nonetheless immortalising them.
At
a wizened 34 years of age, the fatigued James settles into
iconic deification. An outlaw outweighed by the tides of legend
and the tales of courage magnified by an audience enraptured
by true stories of crime. Notoriety and celebrity bleed into
each other. The idea carries a purview of our contemporary
cultural import of fame and its cults of personalities. Writer-director
Andrew Dominik is careful not to devolve its own overtextualised,
and highly subjective mythos into filmic pablum. The attention
to detail in the characters is frequently enriched with elements
of fatalism until the ruptured fabrics of their environment
are revealed through the pas de deux that transpires between
James and Ford.
Dominik
invokes the most prominent of all betrayals. Ford emerges
as a cravenly Judas, slaying the one he professes undying
love for. As the borderlines between passion and envy merge
and fade into each other, it becomes clear that its plaintive
pitch of veneration reaches into a reservoir of psychology
gripping the two men from the moment James succumbs to his
resurgent vanity. Arched by its metaphysical approach to its
cinematography, it resonates the loaded relationship shared
between them. The vast Midwestern fields during the 1880s
provide the stage as dissonance is contemplated as an inevitable
response to treachery.
Literally
one long epilogue, Dominik bookends this sorrowful story of
endings and beginnings with a credo of blood ties. And at
an overextended 160 minutes, the film bears witness to more
than just its eponymous killers. Insights abound in its narrative
sprawl, from Robert’s brother Charley (Sam Rockwell)
to Jesse’s own kin, Frank (Sam Shepard). Steeped in
its own conceptual enigma, Dominik ruminates, very slowly
and sombrely on strained dynamics and popular culture. Seeping
pathos into a visually extravagant canvas, Dominik tells a
brutally honest tale on the price of iconography and opportunely
creates an antidote for the balefully emblematic and misbegotten
“American Gangster”.
Movie Rating:
(A rewarding experience for the patient, builds to a powerful
climax)