The Hi-Lo Country is an area of northeast New Mexico,
celebrated by writer Max Evans in his novels. Published in 1960, The Hi-Lo
Country was made into a film in 1998 by
British director, Stephen Frears. Set in the 1940s, it recalls an even earlier era of the West, when cattle ranching and cowboys ruled the open range.
There isn’t a gun or a horse in the poster created for the
film. Just a cowboy hat on the head of Woody Harrelson to suggest we are
somewhere in the West. The 1940s car in the foreground erases any thought of
“Hollywood western,” but a few minutes into this movie and you find yourself
immersed in a world where cowboys still rule.
There are in fact horses and cattle in the film, fistfights,
hard drinking, and a high-stakes game of poker. Small ranchers are up against a
land-grabbing big one. Guns are drawn and shots fired. Men die and women mourn.
It may as well be 1885.
Billy Crudup, Woody Harrelson |
Plot. The film is
about heart-and-soul cowboying. Its two central characters (Woody Harrelson,
Billy Crudup) are men of a dying breed. Their friendship and loyalty to each
other run deep and wide as the Cimarron. Of the two, Harrelson is the more
daring, refusing to be constrained by any obstacle in the way of whatever he
wants.
Returning from service in WWII, they partner with another
old-timer who helps them start a cattle herd. Their chief antagonist is a
cattle baron (Sam Elliott), amused by their efforts to buck the tide of
economic determinism. Only big business succeeds now, he tells them. They will
fail, and he knows it.
Curiously, what holds your interest in the film is not the
conflict between the two cowboys and Elliott or their success or failure as
ranchers. The emotional power has to do with the attraction both young men have
for a married woman (Patricia Arquette), who is the wife of Elliott’s foreman.
Harrelson is the far more determined and reckless in his
pursuit of her, and Crudup steps aside to let them carry on their affair, while
seething with unrequited desire. Meanwhile, he half-heartedly takes an interest
in a pretty Mexican girl (Penelope Cruz), who comes to understand that she will
never win him.
Patricia Arquette |
Romance. Love
triangles in westerns are not new. A similar example recently reviewed here is
the cattle-drive movie Texas (1941), where William Holden
confidently takes Claire Trevor away from saddle-pal Glenn Ford. One big
difference in that film is that Trevor is a spirited presence on screen,
animated and comic.
Arquette’s character is a lovely walking shadow, emotionally
drained by a life of boredom. Her sultry appeal to both men is believable yet
mysterious. Like a good horse, Harrelson explains, she has “bottom.” He wants
her with an undeniable lust that’s the same as his furious love of cowboying
and the bond he’s long had with Crudup.
Wrapping up. Though
shot entirely in New Mexico, the terrain of the film is often the human face
itself. Many sequences are shot in closeup. Shoved so close to the characters,
you can feel the heat of the emotions between them.
Sam Elliott fans will be surprised to find him both
clean-shaven and a villain. He typically smirks in his scenes, the biggest big
shot in the room, who knows nobody can touch him. With a few strands of hair
sticking from under his Stetson, he can look slightly demented.
Woody Harrelson with director Stephen Frears |
The surprise in 1998 must have been Harrelson’s full-bore
performance as the rip-roaring Big Boy. After 200 episodes of his role as the
slow-witted bartender in TV’s Cheers, he
is totally believable as a larger-than-life cowboy. Billy Crudup, all masculine
sensitivity and suppressed desire, makes an excellent foil, both physically and
emotionally.
Critics and audiences seem to have found the film
disappointing when it was released. Yes, it’s loosely structured, a few scenes
seem curiously slow, and a scene set in a blizzard is confusing. But even at
almost two hours, it was compelling enough to keep me riveted to the couch. In
the end, the separate threads of the film fit smoothly together into a single
powerful statement about taking risks and living freely, which has always been
the appeal of the cowboy.
The music in the film deserves note, as does the script by
screenwriter Walon Green, whose first writing credit in Hollywood was with Sam
Peckinpah, for The Wild Bunch (1969).
Another novel by Max Evans, The Rounders (1960) was made into a film in 1965, followed by a TV series, 1966-67.
The Hi-Lo Country is
currently available at netflix, though unfortunately in a pan-and-scan version.
For more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies, click over to Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom.
Photo credits:
imdb.com
Coming up: Frances Charles, In the Country God Forgot (1902)
I've thought this film underrated, as well.
ReplyDeleteActually sounds pretty good. I don't much like the title, though.
ReplyDeleteI've always liked this movie.
ReplyDeleteWow. This looks much better than I remember the reviews being. I am going to look for it.
ReplyDeleteMax Evans will be celebrated at the Western Writers of America convention in Albuquerque in June. Anyone who would like to meet that grand old man will have a chance to sit and visit. I've spent many a happy hour with him.
ReplyDeleteRon, thanks for this fine review. I haven't seen this film in spite of Sam Elliot and Woody Harrelson. Don't think I have missed too many of their films.
ReplyDelete