Hartford Courant

Hill returns to Western genre with new film

Director looked to past while writing ‘Dead for Dollar’

- By Peter Larsen

As director Walter Hill was writing the screenplay for “Dead for a Dollar,” he looked to the past. But his inspiratio­n was a much older past than the Old West tales of cowboys and cattle drives or lawmen and desperados that have played across movie screens since the dawn of Hollywood.

“I started out with an idea that I wanted to do something — this sounds self-aggrandizi­ng — but I wanted to do something in a classic framework,” says Hill, 80, whose films as a writer, director or producer have included the likes of “The Getaway,” “The Warriors,” “48 Hours” and “Alien: Covenant.”

“So I fell back again — I’ve used it several times — on the kind of Homeric idea of ‘corrupt power figure hires a profession­al warrior to bring back a wife who seems to have been abducted, but turns out not to be true,’ ” he says. “I had that in my head, to borrow from Homer.”

What further triggered his imaginatio­n, though, was a real-life character he discovered while researchin­g his tale. “Chris Madsen was born in Denmark,” Hill says. “He was a soldier as a young man in the Danish Army. He fought in the Prussian War in 1864. He then left Denmark.”

After a stint in the French Foreign Legion in North Africa, Madsen sailed to New York City, headed West, joined the U.S. Army, and then made the decision that led to Hill’s particular interest in him.

“He got out of the Army, became a lawman and a bounty man,” Hill says. “And I thought, ‘Well, boy, you know this is a good idea

because all the bounty men we’ve ever seen in movies are always these big, fairly silent Anglo types.’

“I thought it would be very refreshing maybe to try to develop the idea around somebody with a reasonably sophistica­ted European sensibilit­y.”

In “Dead for a Dollar,” now in theaters, Austrian German actor Christoph Waltz plays bounty hunter Max Borlund, who is hired to track down Rachel Price, the allegedly abducted wife played by Rachel Brosnahan.

Willem Dafoe co-stars as Joe Cribbens, an ex-con with a grudge against Borlund, and Benjamin Bratt plays Tiberio Vargas, the Mexican outlaw who controls the barren territorie­s where all the players eventually come together.

“Dead for a Dollar” returns Hill to a genre he has worked in throughout his career with films such

as “The Long Riders” and “Geronimo: An American Legend,” and TV projects such as the Emmy-winning miniseries “Broken Trail.”

“I’ve always admired the elegant simplicity of the storytelli­ng which layers and almost disguises the really fundamenta­l serious issues that they usually portray,” says Hill, whose new film includes subtexts of racism and feminism. “I mean, what makes a Western a Western? It’s not just location or even period.

“It’s the idea that people have to work out their problems in absence of a higher authority,” he says. “They can’t go to the Army or the government. The local constabula­ry is usually weak. They have to sort out whatever problem it is themselves.”

Hill says he assembled his cast with surprising speed.

“I was friendly with Christoph Waltz,” he says

of the actor who has won a pair of Academy Awards, one of them coincident­ally for playing a bounty hunter in “Django Unchained.” “So after I got a draft in shape, I sent him the script.

“You send actors scripts, sometimes you don’t hear for weeks,” Hill says. “I think it was one night later. He called and basically said, ‘When do we start?’ ”

Hill directed Dafoe in 1984’s “Streets Of Fire.” They remained friends, always talking about doing another film together but never quite making it happen.

“I thought he would be a perfect foil to Christoph,” Hill says. “I thought he was the right sensibilit­y. And I wanted him to have a mixed character. He’s not simply a bad guy, as Christoph’s character is not simply a good guy.”

Rachel Brosnahan was a stranger to him, though he knew her Emmy-winning

work in the title role of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” as well as films such as the 2020 neo-noir “I’m Your Woman.”

As the shooting date approached, Hill still didn’t have a lead female actor. Then the casting director told him she might be able to get Brosnahan to read the script. Hill and Brosnahan talked on the phone for half an hour, and she was in.

“I said, ‘Most women characters are looking for love. This woman is not looking for love; she’s looking for respect. She’s looking for her own self-dignity. And that’s what you have to play.’ ”

Hill’s movies have often been praised for their action sequences, and when the film’s showdown finally arrives, the sequence delivers on the promise that has been brewing since the opening credits rolled.

“The first principle is you have to keep everybody within character,” Hill says of his philosophy of action filmmaking. “You’ve been telling this story for an hour and a half, and you must not violate the characters.”

The town and its geography also guide the action, and it’s important that it’s varied, too. While discussing the “very short and very intense” final battle, he mentioned some elements of the ending that could be considered spoilers though Hill sees it differentl­y.

“The audience is rarely surprised,” he says about the familiar plot points of Westerns. “They can be entertaine­d by how you do it. That’s the trick.”

“Dead for a Dollar” is dedicated to director Budd Boetticher, whose 1950s Westerns with actor Randolph Scott and writer Burt Kennedy are some of Hill’s favorites.

“I said to the film editor, ‘Budd Boetticher would have liked this movie,’ ” Hill says. “He said, ‘Why?’ and I said, ‘Because it’s kind of like one of his.’ This is throwing myself on the side of the gods, I realize.

“But I do think it’s true,” he says. “It deals with codes and ethical understand­ings and misunderst­andings, which his films did in a marvelous way.”

Hill is at work on a pair of screenplay­s to direct. One is a 1970s noir about a saloon owner in New York City. The other is another Western about a real-life shooting and an all-star posse that he’s adapting from a book called “Thunder Over the Prairie.”

“As I feel good, might as well keep going,” Hill says. “Somebody will say to me, ‘When are you going to retire?’ — usually with a hopeful voice. I always say, ‘Directors don’t retire.’ I never knew one that did.

“You’re like a ballplayer. At a certain point, they come in and take away your uniform and you go home. But you usually don’t quit.”

 ?? ?? “Dead for a Dollar” cast and crew members Benjamin Bratt, from left, Walter Hill, Rachel Brosnahan, Willem Dafoe and Christoph
“Dead for a Dollar” cast and crew members Benjamin Bratt, from left, Walter Hill, Rachel Brosnahan, Willem Dafoe and Christoph

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