Tombstone
A more recent Hollywood Western re-telling the gunfight at the OK Corral tale,
probably best filmed by John Ford in
My Darling Clementine in
1946. This Western of the 1990s is an undeniably entertaining movie, but it
unfortunately seems to disregard its predecessors. To Western lovers, this disrespect
shows and taints our enjoyment of the film. This recent Hollywood product is
aggressively marketed without so much as a nod to the past. It is geared toward
an audience which has never before heard of Tombstone (map),
Wyatt Earp, or, most certainly, John Ford. Tombstone lends itself some considerable
gravity by having Robert Mitchum narrate the introduction. However, here we
encounter of one of this film's several mixing of legends when we learn of "The
Cowboys, America's earliest example of organized crime..." It can't be
disputed that there were gangs of outlaws in the Old West -- or a degree of
"organized crime" -- but by so labeling them here, we suspect the
producers of Tombstone were trying to include the audience in a 'Kitchen Sink'
production: "Its a Mob Movie and a Western!" Hollywood has always
played fast and loose with the history of the West, but here the cause seems
to be manipulative marketing instead of misunderstood history. Where Eastwood's
Pale Rider was clearly a respectful homage to Shane,
Tombstone acts as though this movie has never been made before. It embellishes
considerably upon such predecessors as My Darling Clementine and Gunfight
at the OK Corral adding the above-mentioned 'Cowboys', a wife for Wyatt
Earp, and opium dens in Tombstone. But in spite of all this disregard for cinematic
and historic past, Tombstone is a well-made film, a worthy latter-day entry
to the Western genre.
This is a colorful and witty movie. Though the build-up to the gunfight finale
suffers from the contemporary Hollywood compulsion to feature violence in the
movie's first 5 minutes and continue it at regular intervals thereafter, the
story moves along well and develops most of the characters with care. Realistic
details are included which gives the movie some revisionist credibility. Tombstone
greatly benefits from Val Kilmer's edgy and sweaty performance as the ailing
Doc Holliday, and in this respect it is superior to My Darling Clementine, where
the peculiar Victor Mature tried to portray the cosmopolitan Holliday. However,
amidst all the intriguing characters and their budding and dying relationships,
we lose some necessary tension in the central escalation toward the confrontation
at the OK Corral. In fact -- perhaps to remedy this -- Tombstone gives us two
gunfights at the end.
But overall, Tombstone is a Good View. Perhaps a Must See in that it is interesting
to consider it in line with the other treatments of the same legend.
JED
Director: George Pan Cosmatos
Screenwriters: Albert LeVino, Edward Parmore, Dean Franklin & Charles Beisner
from Walter Noble Burns bookTombstone
Cast: Kurt Russell.... Wyatt Earp
Val Kilmer.... Doc Holliday
Sam Elliott.... Virgil Earp
Bill Paxton.... Morgan Earp
Powers Boothe.... Curly Bill Brocious
Michael Biehn.... Johnny Ringo
Charlton Heston.... Henry Hooker
Jason Priestley.... Billy Breckinridge
Jon Tenney.... John Behan, Cochise County Sheriff
Stephen Lang.... Ike Clanton
Thomas Haden Church....Billy Clanton
Dana Delany.... Josephine Marcus
Paula Malcomson....Allie Earp
Lisa Collins.... Louisa Earp
Dana Wheeler-Nicholson ...Mattie Blaylock Earp
Date: 1993 130 mins.
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