THE PROPOSITION
by Robert A. Nowotny
Is that what we are? Misanthropes? Lord no, we're a family.
I don't think Howdy Doody would agree…
THE PROPOSITION is a film that Sam Peckenpah would call his own.
From the very opening scene, a piercing gun battle that will make
your ears bleed and your stomach cringe, this Aussie oat opus is a
masterpiece of menance. Writer Nick Cave and Director John
Hillcoat combine their talents to revitalize the Western genre and
they do so with uncompromising, ferocious carnage that is as
pitiless and primal as anything brought to the screen in recent
years.
Needless to say, I loved this film.
Cave is best known as the controversial singer/songwriter who
first shot to fame in the 1980's as head of a band called
“The Birthday Party.” He then climbed to
greater prominence in the 1990's with “Nick Cage and the
Bad Seeds.” He's been quoted as saying, “I
want to write songs that are so sad, the kind of sad where you
take someone's little finger and break it in three
places.” While that may be true for his musical
perspective, I can assure you his on-screen characters' trigger
fingers are all in perfectly fine shape.
Guy Pearce (L.A. CONFIDENTIAL, RULES OF ENGAGEMENT, MEMENTO)
gives a menacing and memorable performance as Charlie Burns, the
middle aged of three brothers, who is given the choice of saving
either the life of his younger brother or his older brother by the
territorial head of police, Captain Stanley. Stanley is poignantly
portrayed by Ray Winstone (COLD MOUNTAIN) whose own men are as
ruthless and uncivil as any of the so-called bad guys except,
perhaps, Arthur Burns, the oldest brother, who commands a
cult-like gang of wild Irish outlaws who are intimidating enough
to play for the University of Miami football team.
“What is an Irishman but a nigger turned inside
out?” asks John Hurt, as Jellon Lamb, a bounty hunter
also on the trail of the Burns gang. “I came to this
beleagured land and the god in me evaporated.”
Yes, 1880's Australia is a bleak, unforgiving Hell made even
less appealing by the urine-drenched lens of Cinematographer
Benoit Delhomme, whose sickly yellow-tinted barren landscapes will
do nothing for the tourist industry in Oz. Add in the ever-present
flies and I think I'll pass on Quantas' Get-Away Bargain Fares.
(Flies even sabotage the bonus segment interviews seen on the
DVD—hasn't anyone down under heard of Vapona pest
strips?)
Danny Huston (THE AVIATOR, THE CONSTANT GARDENER), David Gulpili
(RABBIT-PROOF FENCE, WALKABOUT) and Emily Watson (GOSFORD PARK,
THE LIFE AND DEATH OF PETER SELLERS) round out the excellent
cast—especially Ms. Watson whose underplayed performance
as Martha Stanley, the Captain's wife, is nothing short of
remarkable.
The climatic Christmas Day dinner makes this one of my favorite
films to re-screen during that harried holiday period.
Accordingly, I can assure anyone whose family is a bit
misanthropic (or considers themselves Compassionate Conservatives)
that they will find THE PROPOSITION not only a worthy addition to
the Western canon, but a fine stocking stuffer as well.
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