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Post by Marv on Apr 18, 2021 15:23:04 GMT
Rewatched. Always loved it.
****Spoilers****
After this latest viewing I’m convinced the Preacher was not some sort of undead wraith come back to get his vengeance on the Marshall...but I do believe the Marshall and his company shot the Preacher years ago and left him for dead. The way Preacher shoots the Marshall at the end mimics his own gunshot wounds, save the one in the head. Also Sydney Penny is beautiful!
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Post by petrolino on Apr 18, 2021 15:25:31 GMT
Superb movie.
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Post by Ass_E9 on Apr 19, 2021 0:35:17 GMT
How do you like it in comparison to High Plains Drifter (1973)?
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2021 0:40:27 GMT
Just watched “The Outlaw Jose Wales” today. In a Clint Eastwood movie.
I do think “Pale Rider” was a great film. Underrated.
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Post by Marv on Apr 19, 2021 0:50:31 GMT
How do you like it in comparison to High Plains Drifter (1973)? I prefer it to HPD. I don’t hate HPD but it’s definitely not one of my faves.
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Post by wmcclain on Apr 19, 2021 1:09:22 GMT
Pale Rider (1985), produced and directed by Clint Eastwood. The gang of toughs on horseback shouldn't have shot the dog. It is one thing to raid the hardscrabble mining camp, raise hell and terrify people, but shooting the dog: that's never good. When the girl buries it she prays for a deliverer, and here he comes. Helping the helpless, chastising the wicked, that's what avengers do. According to the wikipedia: "Clint Eastwood said that his character Preacher is an out-and-out ghost". This suggests comparison with the avenging fury/ghost of High Plains Drifter (1973). In the earlier film the entire town is punished, but here the Preacher is after one man: Marshal Stockburn, who he seems to have known before. (The town boss and his minions are just in the way). In the older movie the visitor delivers nothing but sadism and cruelty in his corrections, but here he displays tenderness to and compassion for the good people. I've never quite understood this one, even as an assembly of mythic Western quotes and quasi-supernatural revenge story. I'm missing some pieces. Why is he a Preacher? What does that add? Why does he have to swap his collar for six-guns, when it was clear he was no pacifist before? Why does he have a closed door interlude with the mom, and why do we hear the disembodied voice of Stockburn calling him? "A voice from the past", says the Preacher. Ok... Is Eastwood working out something with his past here, his career in Westerns? Is Stockburn supposed to be Sergio Leone? His deputies have those long dusters everyone wears in spaghetti westerns. In the final gunfight the Preacher kills Stockburn with the same impossible-to-survive six bullets to the chest, a pattern we saw before. Then one to the head, which certainly puts a period to something. The cinematography by Bruce Surtees is particularly fine this time. I wish I knew more about film stocks and lenses, but the rich, dark color is just beautiful. Perhaps too dark in the thumbnails below, but lovely on the large screen. Notes: - Every few years a studio marketing department must assure us: "The Western is back!" They did it for this one and for Silverado (1985).
- Stockburn is played by John Russell, a regular in Westerns of the 1950s.
- Sydney Penny is mighty pretty as young Megan. I have not seen her in anything else, although she has had a busy TV career.
- The mining camp is an improbably loving community with families and happy playing kids.
- By contrast the villains are also eco-villains, power-washing away the mountains to get their gold. Decent folk do it the old-fashioned way with pick-axes and lots of sweating.
- The opening raid is much like the beginning of Conan the Barbarian (1982). Of course, in barbarian times they behead the mother rather than killing the dog.
- Like Leone, Eastwood loves dynamite.
- And like High Plains Drifter (1973), it seems he is leaving before the fighting begins, but he gets back in time for the action.
- Filmed in Idaho, with some rail and town scenes in California.
Available on Blu-ray. The images are often quite fine, although the black levels are not good at night. I recall this is typical for Eastwood's Warner films on home video.
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Post by jcush on Apr 19, 2021 1:09:31 GMT
I'm a fan.
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Apr 19, 2021 1:16:41 GMT
Eastwood is such a legend.
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Post by millar70 on Apr 19, 2021 5:13:20 GMT
I love it.
Not quite at the level of true Eastwood Western classics like Unforgiven, Outlaw Josey, ot TGTBATU, but still very enjoyable.
I do think, though, that an extra 15-20 minutes on the background story between Clint and his enemy would have helped out. Still, though, an excellent Clint flick.
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