Empire (UK)

THE HARDER THEY FALL

- WHELAN BARZEY

OUT NOW (CINEMAS), ★★★★ 3 NOVEMBER (NETFLIX) CERT TBC / 130 MINS

DIRECTOR Jeymes Samuel

CAST Jonathan Majors, Idris Elba, Zazie Beetz, Regina King, Lakeith Stanfield, Delroy Lindo

PLOT When outlaw Nat Love (Majors) discovers his nemesis Rufus Buck (Elba) has been sprung from prison, he rounds up his gang — Jim Beckwourth (RJ Cyler), Mary Fields (Beetz), Cuffee (Danielle Deadwyler), Bill Pickett (Edi Gathegi) — to track Buck down and wreak revenge for the murder of his parents.

IF THE WESTERN has largely been the domain of grizzled white men both in front of and behind the camera, The Harder They Fall is a flip, fun, flashy corrective. Building on his previous work (his debut album They Die By Dawn & Other Short Stories), director Jeymes ‘The Bullitts’ Samuel (brother of Seal) puts pistols firmly in the hands of under-represente­d groups rarely featured in cowboy classics, and lets rip.

This wildly entertaini­ng reimaginin­g of American history sees outlaw Nat Love (Jonathan Majors) discover that Rufus Buck (Idris Elba) — the man who executed both of his parents and brutally branded Nat with a scalpel — has been freed from incarcerat­ion. Both men set out on a collision course, leaving enough bloodshed in their wake to make an abattoir blush. Nat’s posse includes quick-shooter Jim Beckwourth (RJ Cyler), sparky saloon singer Mary Fields (Zazie Beetz), Cuffee (Danielle Deadwyler) — Samuel’s genre inclusivit­y also stretches to featuring women in prominent roles — and Bill Pickett (Edi Gathegi); in Buck’s corner, he’s packing ‘Treacherou­s’ Trudy Smith (Regina King) and quick draw Cherokee Bill (Lakeith Stanfield), who we meet in a tense train heist (check out the name on the carriage) — the duo are an unlikely but electric pairing. Majors makes for a winning presence as Nat and Elba is suitably mean and moody, expertly delivering a game-changing late-in-the-day monologue. And, as ever, Delroy Lindo adds gravitas as Bass Reeves — in reality the first Black Deputy Marshall — who becomes swept up in Nat Love’s gang.

As exciting as the casting is Samuel’s style, full of verve and imaginatio­n. From freeze frames to whimsical captions, the director owes a huge debt to Tarantino (early QT collaborat­or Lawrence Bender is a producer here), but finds some nifty licks of his own (Nat and Cuffee hold up a “white bank” that is literally white). However, marvelling (or cowering in fear) at The

Harder They Fall’s ultra-stylised gore would be to miss its true focus: to shine a light on Black Americans in the Old West so often marginalis­ed in Hollywood history. A third of cowboys were Black and took on the lifestyle in search of a better life after being freed from slavery. Racism is hinted at (there is a different use of the N-word) but never explicitly referenced. Instead, Samuel trusts you to read between the lines. In a defiant attempt to resist a newly imposed income tax, a citizen of Redwood tells Treacherou­s Trudy that it would put the townspeopl­e between “a rock and a hard place”, to which she staunchly replies, “How long have you lived in this country? A rock and a hard place is what we call Monday.”

Not everything works —the burgeoning romance between Nat and Mary feels undercooke­d — but Samuel presents a dynamic version of the Western fit for modern-day consumptio­n. Writing, directing, producing and probably even loading the shotguns between each take, Samuel’s fingerprin­ts are also all over the soundtrack, writing the score and adding playful flips of reggae and highlife classics such as Barrington Levy’s ‘Here I Come’ and Fela Kuti’s ‘Let’s Start’. The Wild West has a new lone hero. VERDICT

Packed with style, charm and a barrel-full of shrapnel for good measure, The Harder They Fall will still be standing when the smoke clears. The Bullitts doesn’t miss.

 ?? ?? Trudy (Regina King), Rufus (Idris Elba) and Cherokee Bill (Lakeith Stanfield), ready to rumble.
Trudy (Regina King), Rufus (Idris Elba) and Cherokee Bill (Lakeith Stanfield), ready to rumble.

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