Showing posts with label Western. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2013

Review: Django Unchained

Sorry it took so long but today I finally unveil my review of the new Quenten Tarrantino film Django Unchained. Is it an alternate history? Will you become a racist by watching it? Is it even good? Let's find out...

Set in 1858, the film follows a slave (Jamie Foxx) named Django (named after the popular spaghetti western character and the original actor makes a cameo appearance).  Freed from slavery by bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) who needs his help in identifying three fugitives. After helping Schultz identify (and kill) the men, Schultz takes Django on as a partner and together they collect bounties (lots of bounties) across the Old West. Schultz, who despises slavery, decides to help Django rescue his wife Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) from a cruel and charismatic plantation owner Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio). Posing as slavers, the pair trick Candie into believing they want to purchase one of his Mandingo fighters and hope the ridiculous price they pay will put Candie in a good enough mood to sell Broomhilda as well. Candie's house slave, Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson), however, suspects their true intentions and, as in most Tarantino films, blood is spilled.

Lots and lots of blood.

Seriously the red paint supply must have been tapped out in California by the time they finished filming.

Frankly I liked the film. It is a modern take on the classic western tropes, with plenty of ridicule of slavery and racism. Waltz put on a stellar performance and one can be forgiven for mistaking him as the main character. He certainly deserved the Golden Globe he received and it will be a travesty if he does not get the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. The film is, as mentioned above, extremely violent and graphic. This doesn't bother me, but my wife did walk out of the theater about 20 minutes in, so make sure whoever you bring into the film can stomach the gore. Also the gratuitous use of the n-word might offend people (but perhaps only after the 136th time you hear it).

Of course no film is perfect and there have been plenty of criticisms (I found Cracked's article on the film to sum them up rather well). Some have complained about pacing, and I agree when it comes to Django's flashbacks/hallucinations of his wife or the Australian slaver scene (sorry Tarantino, you just can't act), but generally I felt Tarantino's choices did not distract too much from the overall narrative. Perhaps my biggest beef with the film was the lead actor, Foxx. Trust me, Foxx gives his best performances in the film when he keeps his mouth shut and does the stoic avenger. When he gets cocky and tries to be funny, it hurt the film.

I would be remiss, however, to not touch upon the history covered by the film. Is Django Unchained an alternate history? No. At best it is historical fiction that takes a lot of liberties with the source material. Lincoln gave a much better picture of race relations in mid-19th century America, despite being far from perfect, so go see that if you want historical accuracy. In Django Unchained, every white person is an evil, sadistic, racist buffoon except for the one German (thank God he won't live long enough to see what happens to his home country in 1933). An early version of the KKK make a cameo, but they are so inept that they can be taken down by two bounty hunters working in the Deep South.

In fact, as Jelani Cobb in The New Yorker, the film even fails history in the way it portrays blacks as being passive servants who wouldn't dare raise a hand against a white man, except Django. The film ignores the history of how the enslaved undermined the slave economy by running away or revolting. And how rare can Django be when compared to the slaves who fought against America for the British in the American Revolution or against the Confederacy in the Civil War? Kimberly Ellis on Salon slams Django Unchained for its portrayal of black resistance and comes up with several other examples of blacks resisting America's "peculiar institution”.

So you can't really argue that the film is a satire of an era because it fails miserably to understand the era. Yet the film could be a satire of western cinema itself as Amanda Marcotte suggests in her review of Django Unchained. Although the film might suck at history, it certainly has to be a more realistic portrayal of history then the white-washing done by Gone With the Wind. At worst the film took a controversial subject (slavery and the Civil War) and made it into a joke. Yes I can see why people will be offended, but as  a character from my favorite web comic put it: "[t]he first step toward recovery is to turn your personal tragedy into a weapon for making others horribly uncomfortable." Author and editor Maurice Broaddus seemed to embrace that fact when he called the film an "empowerment vehicle" right after admitting he once fantasized about killing white people after watching Roots.

So suspend your disbelief and go enjoy a good, over-the-top revenge fantasy.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Review: Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp by Glen Robinson

Grade: C
Steampunk is a great genre to write stories in.  Besides the imaginative tech, authors have a wide variety of fascinating of historical figures to choose from.  For example, did you know Tom Horn, the title character of Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp by Glen Robinson, is a real person?  Obscure historical figures have found new life in alternate history, like Mordechai Anielewicz in Harry Turtledove's Worldwar series.

Back to the novel, Tom Horn (ex-Pinkerton, ex-Indian fighter, ex-gunslinger) has settled down to enjoy the rest of his years in peace on a south Texas ranch. That is until he is arrested for murder, only to be rescued by New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt.  Taking Tom and his nephew, Kid, east in a zeppelin, he recruits Horn to guard his 16-year-old niece Eleanor who is being sent to Vienna to attend a meeting of world leaders. War is brewing and the Krupp industrial family wants to stoke the fires so they can profit by selling weapons.  An enigmatic group known as the Foundation wants to prevent a world war from happening and is sending Eleanor with her uncanny ability to make peace to convince the Great Powers that brinkmanship is not the answer.  The Warlords of Krupp will do anything to stop her.

The plot to Tom Horn is not very original.  The bad guys want to start a world war so they can sell weapons, the good guys want to stop it from happening.  Similar plots can be found in the films Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows and the awful abortion The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (go read the graphic novel by Alan Moore instead).  The idea of starting a war, even for a weapons company, always sounds like a bad business plan.  War can be destructive, so unless Krupp's factories are located in some remote corner of the Earth, the factories producing the weapons could be destroyed.  Even if the factories were in some remote corner of the planet, they would still need to be staffed and supplied with raw materials and the finished product would need to be shipped to whatever nation needed it.  Whether by air or sea, any ship carrying the goods could be attacked by another nation wanting to deny their enemies from gaining the weapons.  Finally, people don't like it when you give weapons to the enemies.  While in Tom Horn the Krupps seem to be allied with the Germans, my guess is the Kaiser would not approve of selling the same weapons to the British, French or Russians.

As I mentioned before, Krupp is desperate to stop Eleanor from reaching Venice, yet Krupp agents carry out overly-complicated to stop the teenager and her guardians.  Although Tom explained to Roosevelt that he expected Krupp to come all guns blazing, not caring if innocent bystanders get caught, rarely does his theory play out.  The bad guys consistently try to capture Eleanor first before they kill her.  For example, the Germans use a sub to board and capture an ocean liner that Tom and Eleanor are travelling on, instead of just destroying the ship altogether.  Perhaps there is some logic to the Krupp business plan and their strategy to stop Eleanor that escapes me, but at the moment I cannot think of it.

Despite the incompetent villains, Tom Horn was a fascinating character.  His common sense, cowboy ways delightfully clashed with the scientists and elitists he met on his travel to Europe.  I also like any story that includes a shout out to one of my favorite American presidents, Theodore Roosevelt.  I wish more authors would use this bigger-than-life character, who probably lived a more eclectic life than the title character himself.  In fact Robinson makes use of several historical characters, sometimes to the detriment of the novel.  Thomas Edison and a very young Adolf Hitler, both mentioned in the Amazon description of the novel, do appear in non-speaking roles in the novel, but have very little impact on the plot.  It felt like the author shoe-horned them into the novel simply because of their recognizable names, instead of helping the story move along.

There are other issues with the novel that prevented me from giving it a higher grade.  Passive voice, POV problems and typos.  There were also contradictory statements made by Tom Horn that led to some head scratching.  For example, Tom mentions earlier in the novel that the mute Kid lost his ability to communicate after his father died.  Later in the novel Tom explains that the boy became mute after he got hit on the head.  Issues like that show a lack of editing.

Even with said issues, the book does not disappoint in its claim of being steampunk adventure novel.  It includes the usual tropes associated with the genre: famous historical persons, anachronistic technology, airships and, of course, steam power.  Lack of editing and the unoriginal plot hurts the novel, but fans of the less serious "steampulp" genre will enjoy reading Tom Horn beat up the bad guys and save the world in the process.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for Alt Hist and a contributor to Just Below the Law. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and his own writing blog. When not writing he works as an attorney and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Preview: Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp by Jackson Paul

The next book I am reading is Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp by Jackson Paul (a.k.a. Glen Robinson).  Here is the description from Amazon:

1899. The Wild West is winding down, thanks to people like Tom Horn. Ex-Pinkerton, ex-Indian fighter, ex-gunslinger, Horn has settled down to enjoy the rest of his years in peace on a south Texas horse ranch. That is until New York Governor and fellow ex-Rough Rider Teddy Roosevelt shows up in his zeppelin, asking for Horn’s help in getting his 16-year-old niece Eleanor to Vienna. War clouds are brewing, and Eleanor’s uncanny ability to make peace is needed. Can Tom Horn get her to Austria when the Krupp war machine wants her silenced? Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp features a fresh, western look at steampunk, and includes cameos by Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers, Mata Hari, even a very young Adolf Hitler. In the spirit of The Wild Wild West and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Tom Horn vs. The Warlords of Krupp will not disappoint.

Want more info?  Check out the book trailer:

So will it be any good?  Well you will just have to wait until next week to find out.  In the meantime here are some sketches for the possible future cover of the novel:


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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for Alt Hist and a contributor to Just Below the Law. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and his own writing blog. When not writing he works as an attorney and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Drifter: Post-Apocalypti​c Western Web Series

Check out all six episodes of Drifter series part one, Drifter: Broken Road, written, directed, and produced by Jason Brasier, on DrifterSeries.com. A Top 10 finalist in the Mingle Media Audience Choice Awards, Drifter: Broken Road  follows a figure known as Drifter, portrayed by Vanessa Leinani, fresh off her role from the film 180, and currently filming her role as Detective Jade in the web series, Bail Out. In the story, Drifter befriends the owners of a trading post on her trail to revenge, five years after a second civil war. It is here that some of Drifter’s recent actions and past come back to haunt her.

The series brings Missouri State University Graduate and indie filmmaker, Jason Brasier’s sci-fi western vision to life on the small screen. Jason has been making films since he was a child, and the journey it’s taken to get to Drifter: Broken Road has been a long, but enjoyable one. A big western and science fiction fan, Jason said, “It was fun blending two of my favorite genre’s together and telling an old fashioned story in a new medium.”

The series also stars the talented Rodney Wiseman as the mysterious Moses Breckenridge. One of Rodney's recent feature film projects, The Frontier Boys, is on the ballot for the 2012 Dove Awards.

The rest of the amazingly talented cast includes Ryan Smith, Hannah Duncan, Nick Herra, Ryan Shields, Todd Hansard, Dale Gehris, Blake Flageolle, Jerry-Mac Johnston, Zac Rantz, Michael Brasier, Scott New, Andrew Long, Kevin Keppy, and Angel Gonzales. Drifter: Broken Road is the first web series production for American Wasteland Entertainment (LLC), a new production company focusing on online based entertainment and film, owned and operated by Jason Brasier and Brittney Greer.