If westerns have taught us nothing else—and I’ve taken far
too many life lessons from the genre—it’s that nothing brings a killer who has
renounced killing back to his old ways like messing with his family or his dog.
That’s the primary education a small-town numbskull learns in writer/director Ti
West’s take on the spaghetti western, In a Valley of
Violence.
Over the course of movies like The House of the
Devil, The Innkeepers, and The
Sacrament, West has shown an uncanny ability to ape genre trappings
in ways most who attempt it fail. His films have a ring of authenticity that other
imitations and homages often lack.
Usually operating in horror, this time out he turns his lens
on the dusty American frontier and the lives of the hard men who occupied that
space. And again, his attention to detail is so spot on to movies like
The Man with No Name Trilogy, The Great
Silence, and Death Rides a Horse, that I
practically expected the dialogue to be dubbed in and mismatched against the
movements of the actors’ lips.
From the opening scene to the stylized credits to the whip
pans, sudden zooms, and the Ennio Morricone-esque score, In a Valley
of Violence screams what it is from the first frame. And while that’s
a great strength of the picture, it’s also a key weakness. Enamored with the
aesthetics, tone, and feel, West and company check off all the genre boxes, but
never take the time to add much to them. What unfolds is an overly familiar,
beat for beat revenge western that, while entertaining at times, delivers
little to set it apart.
Ethan Hawke plays a grizzled loner, heading to Mexico with
his dog, running from a vague, nebulous past doled out piece by piece as the
movie progresses. Eventually he gets a name, but in true western fashion, he
spends much of the runtime nameless. He knows it’s a bad idea, but to save time
and get a hot meal, he stops off in Denton, Texas, a frontier shithole
populated by nitwits and big fish in a small pond who think they’re tough shit.
Of course, he runs afoul of local hot-head Gilly (James Ransone), and trouble
occurs.
In a Valley of Violence attempts to
interject witty banter and gallows humor—the Tarantino influence can’t be
denied—with mixed results. Hawke is serviceable as the grim cowboy pushed to
deeds of violence—he just wants to be left alone, he’s had enough killing.
Ransone plays Gilly like he’s still playing Ziggy in The
Wire—cocky and insecure, he has a confidence and self-assuredness
that belies his overall incompetence. Karen Gillan bluffs and blusters as
Ellen, Gilly’s main squeeze, in a performance that feels more in tune with the
stage than the screen. And Taissa Farmiga plays Ellen’s sister, Mary Anne, the
one good person in the whole damn town, the one who feels trapped and wants
more and looks for any avenue of escape.
The real star of In the Valley of
Violence (aside from Jumpy the dog), however, is John Travolta as the
town’s Marshall. And also Gilly’s father. Alternately funny and blood-chilling,
he’s as good as he’s been in years. He knows his son is a screw up and that
he’s enabled him by cleaning up his messes his whole life, but it’s still his
son. As resigned as the strange drifter is to his ultimate fate, so too is the
Marshall. Neither one wants the violent clash that’s coming, but both know they
have no way to avoid it, and the two form a nice counterbalance for each other.
Spaghetti westerns work like they do because of the sparse,
barebones approach. Gritty, stoic men say little, and in that silence speak
volumes. Here, obvious dialogue guts all subtext and subtlety, and the
protagonist spells out his thoughts and motivations as his inner monologue
becomes very exterior and every word out of his mouth lands super on the nose.
Fine for what it is—loving imitation and momentary
distraction—In a Valley of Violence never becomes anything
more, paced and plotted precisely like the films it emulates. Entertaining
enough, it’s on par with a meal where you know you ate, it stemmed your hunger,
but you have trouble remembering exactly what was on the plate.
[Grade: C+]
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