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The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford [Blu-ray] by Andrew Dominik
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Brad Pitt, Brooklynn Proulx, Casey Affleck, Dustin Bollinger, Mary-Louise Parker Director: Andrew Dominik Brand: Warner Brothers DVD: Region Code 0 Audio: English (Original Language); English (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Dubbed); Spanish (Dubbed) Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 2.40:1 Running Time: 160 minutes DVD Release Date: 2008-02-05 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Studio: Warner Home Video
Movie Reviews of The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford [Blu-ray]Movie Review: He was no coward Summary: 5 StarsFor those of you who think Robert Ford was a coward, or, if you dislike the title and the movie because you think it's unfair that Robert Ford is labeled a coward, I'd ask you this question: Is the title perhaps being ironic? The title describes how history has judged the men, but the movie shows a different story. He is no coward.
We see "Bob" Ford's flashes of anger and his lack of fear towards Jesse James. James acknowledges that he thinks Ford is no coward. That's why he tells him how uneasy he feels in Ford's presence, but not in his brother's presence. Watch the table scene again with the three brothers, when Robert Ford describes how he's similar to Jesse James. Jesse James needles him, but before doing so you can tell by the way he looks at Robert that he is the only person there that Jesse James likes. Why he likes him is the interesting thing to think about. Moreover, James sees the similarity between the two. All of his conversations preceding this are with liars, whom he despises, and he sees Robert Ford's unbound temper as being similar to his own, perhaps even as being the only way an honest soul can behave.
Given James' psychological exhaustion (e.g. he doesn't sleep, he's paranoid and has titanic mood swings), he seems to embrace his own death at the end--because Ford contains something of James in him, and James sees him as a suitable executioner.
From what I've seen of the movies of 2007, There Will Be Blood's Daniel Plainview is the only character rival to Jesse James and Robert Ford. Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck own the screen when they are in the shot, and the presence of Pitt seems to haunt every scene. At one point he emerges out of thin air, riding his horse on the trail. Both men depict souls in crisis, with tempers barely contained beneath the surface, and yet they both expose the pathos of their characters, the resentments lurking behind their emotional vulnerability.
The two characters carry out their violent and haunted destinies, which the title expresses with directness and with irony. The beautiful cinematography is the best you'll see in film today. The flashbacks contain insightful voice-overs that are wonerful oddities and another example of why this film will continue to be watched.
Summary of The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford [Blu-ray]Everyone in 1880s America knows Jesse James. He?s the nation?s most notorious criminal hunted by the law in 10 states. He?s also the land?s greatest hero lauded as a Robin Hood by the public. Robert Ford? No one knows him. Not yet. But the ambitious 19-year-old aims to change that. He?ll befriend Jesse ride with his gang. And if that doesn?t bring Ford fame he?ll find a deadlier way. Friendship becomes rivalry and the quest for fame becomes obsession in this virile epic produced in part by Ridley Scott and featuring gripping portrayals by Brad Pitt (winner of the Venice Film Festival Best Actor Award) as Jesse and Casey Affleck as the youth drawn closer to his goal?and farther from his own humanity.Running Time: 160 min.Format: BLU-RAY DISC Genre: WESTERN/COWBOYS UPC: 012569829725 Manufacturer No: 82972 Of all the movies made about or glancingly involving the 19th-century outlaw Jesse Woodson James, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford is the most reflective, most ambitious, most intricately fascinating, and indisputably most beautiful. Based on the novel of the same name by Ron Hansen, it picks up James late in his career, a few hours before his final train robbery, then covers the slow catastrophe of the gang's breakup over the next seven months even as the boss himself settles into an approximation of genteel retirement. But in another sense all of the movie is later than that. The very title assumes the audience's familiarity with James as a figure out of history and legend, and our awareness that he was--will be--murdered in his parlor one quiet afternoon by a backshooting crony. The film--only the second to be made by New Zealand-born writer-director Andrew Dominik--reminds us that Dominik's debut film, Chopper (2000), was the cunningly off-kilter portrait of another real-life criminal psychopath who became a kind of rock star to his society. The Jesse James of this telling is no Robin Hood robbing the rich to give to the poor, and that train robbery we witness is punctuated by acts of gratuitous brutality, not gallantry. Nineteen-year-old Bob Ford (Casey Affleck) seeks to join the James gang out of hero worship stoked by the dime novels he secretes under his bed, but his glam hero (Brad Pitt) is a monster who takes private glee in infecting his accomplices with his own paranoia, then murdering them for it. In the careful orchestration of James's final moments, there's even a hint that he takes satisfaction in his own demise. Affleck and Pitt (who co-produced with Ridley Scott, among others) are mesmerizing in the title roles, but the movie is enriched by an exceptional supporting cast: Sam Shepard as Jesse's older, more stable brother Frank; Sam Rockwell as Bob Ford's own brother Charlie, whose post-assassination descent into madness is astonishing to behold; Paul Schneider, Garret Dillahunt, and Jeremy Renner as three variously doomed gang members; and Mary-Louise Parker, who as Jesse's wife Zee has few lines yet manages with looks and body language to invoke a wellnigh-novelistic backstory for herself. There are also electrifying cameos by James Carville, doing solid actorly work as the governor of Missouri; Ted Levine, as a lawman of antic spirit; and Nick Cave, composer of the film's score (with Warren Ellis) and screenwriter of the Aussie "Western" The Proposition, suddenly towering over a late scene to perform the folk song that set the terms for the book and movie's title. Still, the real costar is Roger Deakins, probably the finest cinematographer at work today. The landscapes of the movie (mostly in Alberta and Manitoba) will linger in the memory as long as the distinctive faces, and we seem to feel the sting of its snows on our cheeks. Interior scenes are equally persuasive. Few Westerns have conveyed so tangibly the bleakness and austerity of the spaces people of the frontier called home, and sought in vain to warm with human spirit. --Richard T. Jameson
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