Old Henry
With a 95%
positive rating by critics and a 92% positive audience rating (*1), Old Henry
is one of the most critically acclaimed and popular western
movies in recent memory.
At first
sight it tells a rather familiar western story of a widower and a father with
some dark secrets who desires to live a peaceful life. Early on in the movie we
notice that he’s in possession of a collection of fire-arms that he is
carefully hiding from his son Wyatt. Having seen many westerns in our lives, we
expect that sooner or later this old man will be forced to pick up his
guns and become, once again, the man he used to be (but metaphorically buried
years ago) - and that’s exactly what happens. But
nevertheless the movie manages to surprise us.
The
quintessential western about the man with a violent past who
is forced to face his inner demons, is of course Shane (1953,
George Stevens), but in Old Henry this familiar western trope is mixed
with some far more darker ideas from more recent westerns, notably Clint
Eastwood’s Unforgiven (1992). Eastwood's character in that
movie, William Munny, expresses the idea that it's a hellova thing
killing a man. Old Henry clarifies in a conversation with his son that
practicing with a gun is one thing, but aiming a gun at a human being is
crossing another line.
In
appearance Henry is also closer to William Munny than to Shane: as played by
Alan Ladd, Shane was all buckskin and goldilocks, a gunslinger in the prime of
his life. Quite on the contrary, Henry is an old man with a weathered face
who's wearing rags and suspenders. His quiet life as a farmer is turned upside
down when he hesitantly offers shelter to an injured man called Curry, who
is in possession of a large sum of money. We have learned, in the opening
scene, that three men and their leader, a man called Ketchum, are looking for
him. Both Curry and his persecutors pose as lawmen and it’s up to old Henry to
decide who is trustworthy and who is not.
What
elevates Old Henry is the complexity of the characters and their
interactions: Why is Old Henry so protective towards his son? Why doesn’t
he want him to learn how to use a gun? What exactly happened to him when he was
a young man himself? And why do both Curry and Ketchum have the idea that
they’ve met this old Man before? In other words: Who the hell is he???
In spite of
a length of a mere 90 minutes, Old Henry is a slow burner: some viewers –
especially younger ones, familiar with the fast and furious style
of modern cinema – may find it too slow, but it meticulously works towards a
revelation that is well-prepared, but nevertheless so surprising that it will
leave most viewers flabbergasted.
Old Henry
is a remarkably assured work of art if you know that it’s only the second
feature length movie of this director; the script (also written by Ponciroli)
is subtle and clever – the crucial revelation (that might cause a few
eye-rolls) is immediately followed by the film’s final showdown, a well-staged
and crisply edited (and pretty violent) action sequence, so you won’t have too
much time to think about it. Performances are uniformly strong, but there’s no
denying that the film belongs to Tim Blake Nelson. He is one of those actors
who can really become a character: with his greasy hair, scruffy
face and sloppy shirt and trousers he simply is this old man
Henry - and for this reason we are also willing to believe that he is the
person that the script wants us to believe he is.
Notes:
* (1) See: Rotten Tomatoes
2021 - Dir: Potsy Ponciroli - Cast: Tim Blake Nelson (Old Henry), Stephen Dorff (Ketchum), Scott Haze (Curry), Gavin Lewis (Wyatt), Trace Adkins (Al), Max Arciniega, Richard Speight Jr. - Screenplay: Potsy Ponciroli





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