I have been reviewing films all my life, semi-professionally in the past and for the past 10 or 12 years on imdb and more recently in letterboxd and facebook. The idea of this blog is to get as many of those reviews gathered together in one place. I have had a great deal of support and encouragement from a lot of people throughout the world and I hope that continues. Now for the ratings. **** = not to be missed. *** = highly recommended. ** = recommended. * = of interest and no stars = avoid..
Monday, 20 May 2019
THE LEFT-HANDED GUN **
One of the strangest westerns ever made. Arthur Penn's "The Left Handed
Gun", adapted from a play by Gore Vidal, came right at the height of the
'teenage rebel' cycle of the fifties with Paul Newman's Billy the Kid
having more in common with James Dean's Jim Stark than any Western
outlaw I can think of. The film wasn't a success; it's highfalutin
dialogue and over-the-top acting proving too much for a general audience
who, if they looked just below the surface, would have easily detected a
homosexual subplot involving Hurd Hatfield's character who acts as a
kind of Greek Chorus. It marked the screen debut of Penn who didn't make
another film for four years though it's now built up something of a
cult reputation. It isn't really very good, and it is very
self-conscious, but it is also too bizarre to dismiss out of hand.
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