Even though he’d been
producing many of his own movies since the late ’50s, the venerable star Kirk
Douglas didn’t try directing until the early ’70s, and it’s surprising how
little skill he brought to the task. Both movies that Douglas directed—this one
and the pirate flick Scalawag
(1973)—suffer from middling storylines and tonal chaos. Posse is the better of the two, but it’s a messy endeavor in which
Douglas’ admirable ambition far exceeds his directorial abilities. A failed
attempt at a postmodern Western in the Sam Peckinpah mode, Posse revolves around U.S. Marshal Howard Nightingale (Douglas),
who tries to curry political favor with frontier types by tracking down
ruthless bank robber Jack Strawhorn (Bruce Dern). Nightingale organizes the mob
of the film’s title, only to get captured by his quarry. Then, in what was
undoubtedly meant to be an ironic twist, Nightingale’s posse must
turn criminal in order to raise money with which to pay Strawhorn for
Nightingale’s release. It all ends with lots of preaching and violence, so
viewers are supposed to walk away from the movie contemplating issues of
justice and mob rule and so forth. Had the movie been written with more
clarity—and, quite frankly, had Douglas’ lead performance been more
subtle—Posse might have become the
hard-hitting statement Douglas surely envisioned. But while previous Douglas
productions about the murky intersections between morality and violence had
shattering power (consider his remarkable Stanley Kubrick collaboration from
1957, Paths of Glory), Posse is simultaneously overwrought and
underdeveloped. The biggest moments are delivered with
bludgeoning obviousness, an issue exacerbated by Douglas’ over-the-top acting,
and the heaviest thematic elements are subverted by mixed narrative messages.
In the end, the film says so many things, so loudly, that it’s a muddle. Still,
the intentions are good, the production values are fine, and supporting player Dern’s
performance crackles with his unique energy—few people play villains with
anywhere near the level of humanity and nuance that Dern brings to the task.
Posse:
FUNKY
1 comment:
Derna is indeed a very unique actor and in my opinion much under appreciated. His presence improves any film that he is in.
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