Gallagher’s
Forum
By
Jon Gallagher
The
Lone Ranger (Disney, 2013) – Director: Gore
Verbinski. Cast: Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer, William Fichtner, Tom
Wilkinson, Ruth Wilson, Helena Bonham Carter, James Badge Dale,
Bryant Prince, Barry Pepper, Saginaw Grant, & Mason Elston Cook.
Color, 149 minutes.
Let
me be clear about something right up front: I don’t like reboots.
It flat out pisses me off that some idiot thinks that he’s got a
better idea of how a story should be told, so he changes what the
original author or screenwriter created to mold characters and
situations to better fit the rebooter’s vision of a better story.
If
the original author or screenwriter had wanted it that way, that’s
the way he (or she) would have written it!
Over
the last several years, we’ve sat through and endless parade of
Batmen, Supermen, Spidermen, Fantastic Fours (Would that be Fantastic
Eight? Elite Eight?), and even the Lone Ranger.
Speaking
of the Lone Ranger…
I
realize the movie came out a couple of years ago, but after reading
one horrible review after another, I decided my money would be better
spent on other frivolous things rather than a ticket or even a
rental. I waited for the film to appear on Encore (which my cable
company thinks I should have) and watched it On Demand instead.
I’m
glad I saved my money.
The
movie is little more than a vehicle for Johnny Depp to display his
versatility as an actor. Evidently he was so concerned that he might
be recognized in his role as Tonto that he spent most of the movie
hiding behind face paint that made him look more like “the Crow”
version of professional wrestler Sting than it did an Indian.
The
plot, along with the origin of the Lone Ranger, is absolutely horrid.
Depp had to be “the star” of the film, so they centered the movie
more around the Indian sidekick than they did on the masked man.
Armie Hammer dons the mask to hide his identity of John Reid.
We
begin the movie with a little kid dressed like the Lone Ranger
entering a carnival sideshow that depicts the old West. When he gets
to the display of an Indian in his “natural habitat,” he
discovers that the wax figure is actually a human being: Depp under
several pounds of prosthetics, which was no doubt modeled after Billy
Crystal’s Miracle Max in The Princess Bride. After the
curious little kid asks a bunch of questions, Tonto reveals the
origin of this incarnation of the Lone Ranger.
Of
course, since Depp is the star, we have to have Tonto looking good,
so he comes off as the brains of the duo, reprising his Captain Jack
Sparrow character at times, teaching his protégé, a bumbling
nerdish attorney how to be a man in the Wild Wild West. The attorney
is John Reid (Hammer), who is the brother of Texas Ranger Dan Reid.
The
evil, cannibalistic Butch Cavendish is being taken to his hanging
when he escapes with the help of his gang and kills everyone who is
trying to transport him. John survives having been deputized by his
brother, and shocks Tonto as the Indian is trying to bury Cavendish’s
massacre.
The
main problem I had with the film (other than a really horrific scene
in which Cavendish becomes cannibalistic – that should NEVER have
made the final cut of a DISNEY movie) is that director Gore Verbinski
couldn’t figure out if he wanted to offer up a straight Western
drama or a comedy or a parody of the old West. There are times when
he attempts to do all three, and it just doesn’t work. Combine that
with the frustration of those of us who grew up seeing the Lone
Ranger as a hero, and you can get a better idea of why movie-goers
stayed away in droves; word of mouth gets around fast.
The
last 40 minutes of the movie aren’t bad at all. There’s a
sequence where the bad guys are battling the good guys on a pair of
trains that are, for the most part, chasing each other along a newly
laid set of tracks. Most of it is CGI, but done well enough to be
exciting and only a little distracting (when something unbelievable
happens like Silver galloping along atop one of the trains). The
thing is this whole scene could have been done just as effectively
without the Lone Ranger and Tonto. With the Lone Ranger in the cast,
HE needs to be the focus, not the special effects.
One
other thing that bothered me a lot was the use of the “William Tell
Overture.” Ever since the days of radio, the Lone Ranger theme has
been used for every single incarnation of the character. It was used
here during the “chase” scene with the trains, but it didn’t
work well. I think it was mainly because the action on the screen
didn’t match the rhythm of the music, and that might have been too
difficult to do. However, the swells and crescendos didn’t match
what was going on movie-wise either, and that made it somewhat
distracting. Had I been the director, I would have hired the
orchestra AFTER the fact and let the conductor watch the movie as he
was arranging the score. That obviously wasn’t done and the end
result came across as Verbinski saying, “Oh yeah! We gotta include
that music thing! I’ll just stick it in here.”
I
won’t be as harsh as some have been. The chase scene saved it from
getting a failing grade, but it only pulled the grade up to a D.
My advice, had this been an assignment of mine when I was a teacher,
would have been, “Pick out what theme you’re going to use
(comedy, parody, whatever) and stick with it throughout.”
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