Cyprus Today

The lines between heroes and villains are blurred in this bloodthirs­ty western

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RETRIBUTIO­N and regret are saddle-sore travelling companions in writer-director Scott Cooper’s gritty western, set during the final years of the bloodthirs­ty war between the United States Army and Native Americans.

Adapted from an unproduced manuscript by screenwrit­er Donald E Stewart, Hostiles cocks its pistol towards political correctnes­s by apportioni­ng blame for the slaughter to both sides of the conflict.

As one white soldier in the film confesses: “We’re all guilty of something.”

Cooper’s script isn’t inclined to rigorously debate moral ambiguitie­s and characters sometimes enforce racial and tribal stereotype­s for the sake of dramatic expediency.

However, boundaries between convention­al heroes and villains are intriguing­ly blurred, and justice is seldom (15, 133 mins) Western/Thriller/Action/Romance

granted to battle-scarred characters as they endure “the Lord’s rough ways”.

Christian Bale delivers a blistering performanc­e as a world-weary army captain, whose humanity is revitalise­d by an unexpected encounter with the sole survivor of a Comanche attack.

Played to the emotionall­y raw hilt by Rosamund Pike, this grief-numbed widow is both a victim and an angel of compassion and mercy, who lassos courage in the most devastatin­g circumstan­ces.

The on-screen pairing of the two British actors elevates Cooper’s film.

Captain Joseph J Blocker (Bale) has so much blood on his hands, one antagonist­ic journalist quips: “Is it true you took more scalps than Sitting Bull?”

A military man of few words and questionab­le deeds, Blocker begrudging­ly escorts his sworn enemy — Cheyenne tribal chef Yellow Hawk (Wes Studi) — from a prison cell at Fort Berringer in New Mexico to the Valley Of The Bears in Montana.

Yellow Hawk is gravely ill and wishes to be at one with his ancestors, surrounded by family including his son Black Hawk (Adam Beach) and daughterin-law Elk Woman (Q’orianka Kilcher).

Blocker shepherds the Cheyenne prisoners south, accompanie­d by Master Sergeant Thomas Metz (Rory Cochrane), Lieutenant Rudy Kidder (Jesse Plemons), Corporal Henry Woodson (Jonathan Majors) and Private Philippe DeJardin (Timothee Chalamet).

En route, the posse befriends Rosalie Quaid (Pike), whose husband and children have been slaughtere­d by Comanches, and

accepts a new commission to escort murder Sergeant Charles Wills (Ben Foster) to the gallows. The condemned man and Blocker have . both know it could just as easily be hese chains,” growls Wills. sion percolates between prisoners orts as they mosey through che territory. tiles trots when it could gallop, g resentment and rivalries to fester the backdrop of the Mountain for which Japanese provide cinematogr­apher a breathtaki­ng obu Takayanagi. roughly hewn beauty of these s contrasts with the darkness that oot in the hearts of men, for whom ence of a gunfight is second nature. west wasn’t won — it was brutally, taken, and never returned.

 ??  ?? Ben Foster as Sergeant Charles Wills and Christian Bale as Captain Joseph Blocker
Ben Foster as Sergeant Charles Wills and Christian Bale as Captain Joseph Blocker

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