The Dominator reviews
Pale Rider
Distributed by
Warner Home Video
Producer:
Screenplay:
Michael Butler abd Dennis Shryack
Music:
Cast:
- Preacher: Clint Eastwood (Dirty Harry, Absolute Power, A Perfect World)
- Hull Harret: Michael Moriarty (Courage Under Fire, Return To Salem's Lot)
- Sarah Wheeler: Carrie Snodgress (Blue Sky, 8 Seconds, Ballad of Little Jo)
- Josh LaHood: Christopher Penn (Reservoir Dogs, True Romance, Short Cuts)
- Coy LaHood: Richard Dysart (The Thing, The Terminal Man)
- Megan Wheeler: Sydney Penny (The Thornbirds (TV))
- Club: Richard Kiel (Moonraker, The Spy Who Loved Me, Force 10 From Navarone)
Pale Rider
tells the story of a community of gold prospectors struggling
to make a living in the Old West, enduring attack after attack from a gang who
come along to rape and pillage the land until there's nothing left, not even
thinking twice when it comes to killing livestock.
Praying for a miracle, it arrives in the form of The Preacher, a man with no
name who'll fight for their rights to live their lives in peace without being
troubled no more.
As Coy LaHood has a writ that claims he owns the goldmines, it's him and his
men versus the locals who are already there. The solution that the Preacher
eventually reaches with LaHood is that he'll pay $1000 to each of the men in
return for them ceasing their search for gold. However, it doesn't seem likely
that they're going to comply at any price.
The cast is a fairly well-balanced one. However, Clint tends to play most of his
characters in films the same way, but he's always watchable. Richard Kiel
doesn't seem to have moved on since playing Jaws in two Bond films (Moonraker,
The Spy Who Loved Me) although he's not done a great deal of note since then
anyway. Of the rest of the cast, Christopher Penn has made a name for himself
in the past few years with roles in True Romance, Short Cuts, and had one of
the most talked about roles in Reservoir Dogs as Nice Guy Eddie, as most people
couldn't work out who shot Nice Guy Eddie (it was Mr. White by the way - rewind
the video and slo-mo that scene - you'll figure it out)
After the scene is set, the 40 minutes in the middle give an insight into the
main characters on both sides. However, all of this drags on longer than is
necessary, and you find yourself waiting for the last half-hour as the wrongs
are put right and the Preacher saves the day.
The widescreen framing is essential for any of Clint's films, most of which
are filmed in a 2.35:1 ratio, bar the recent Meryl Streep co-starrer, The
Bridges of Madison County which was 1.85:1.
Picture quality is very good indeed, and surround sound is averagely used for
directional effects, occasional pieces of music and ambience, but there is one
problem - the stereo channels are reversed which is very noticeable in the
opening scene as the gang come back to terrorise the villagers, racing across
the screen from time to time, the sound going the wrong way. Quite bizarre.
For those of you with VCRs hooked up to amplifiers, rather than playing through
a NICAM television, just switch the audio output leads round when watching this
one.
Film: 2/5
Picture: 4/5
Sound: 3/5
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 1997.
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DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV
connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and
played through a Sony STR-DB930 amplifier.
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