{"id":6981,"date":"2011-08-24T09:00:00","date_gmt":"2011-08-24T08:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6981"},"modified":"2011-08-24T09:00:00","modified_gmt":"2011-08-24T08:00:00","slug":"at-the-movies-cowboys-and-aliens","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/08\/24\/at-the-movies-cowboys-and-aliens\/","title":{"rendered":"At the movies: Cowboys and Aliens"},"content":{"rendered":"
WARNING: CONTAINS LOTS OF SPOILERS – SORRY!<\/strong><\/p>\n
I’ll admit, in the wake of previous supposedly Made For Sarah-style
films being crushing disappointments (no, I’m still not talking to
you, Zack Snyder, after The
Incident<\/a>), I was readying myself for another angry rant in the
general direction of the internet. I went into
Cowboys and Aliens<\/strong> with low hopes: I wanted cowboys, and I
wanted aliens. I got them and they were great.<\/p>\n
The cowboy film has always been an exploration of maleness –
often specifically white American maleness – pitching
“good” masculinity (cowboys) versus “bad”
(indians and bandits). There’s often an additional trope which
sets masculinity against the untamed natural environment.
Alien\/monster films focus on our fear of “others” and
“outsiders” that we cannot understand or control. Often
that other is a frightening idea in our midst, like in District 9<\/strong><\/a> (post-colonial or immigration-related
concerns), or 28 Days Later<\/strong><\/a> (medical experimentation, unchecked
human aggression).<\/p>\n
<\/a>So, with that in mind,
Cowboys and Aliens<\/strong> should tell us what American
masculinity does in the face of “the other”.
Without referencing anything, we can probably conclude that it
shoots at it. This is very true.<\/p>\n
Except…<\/p>\n
… The casting of
Daniel Craig<\/strong> AKA that most English of
Englishmen, James Bond, as the lead in this action romp
seems a little out of kilter. His physical masculinity is
present – of this we are in no doubt – but
there are nice little moments in which traditional tropes
of agressive masculinity are turned slightly around such
as the focus on groups, teams and families succeeding
rather than the usual “one man against the
world”.<\/p>\n
I am probably going into too much analysis for what is
overall a pleasing action romp. The full spoiler-tastic
plot can be found here
on the wiki page<\/a>, but in brief: there are some
cowboys, some aliens, stuff explodes. Daniel Craig takes
his shirt off quite a bit,
Olivia Wilde<\/strong> is hot, mysterious and
gunslinging whilst
Harrison Ford<\/strong> plays himself. He is the original
Space Cowboy<\/a>, after all.<\/p>\n
I did say brief. You can find some more things
plus interesting interviews with cast and crew
over at the Huffington Post<\/strong><\/a>.<\/p>\n
What I hadn’t realised, though it is
forehead smackingly obvious in hindsight, was
that the orignal public outing for this was in
comic
book format<\/a> from an idea by Scott
Rosenberg, who took a long time to actually
sell the concept as a film. No idea why it was
such a hard sell; stranger
things have happened at the cinema<\/a>, after
all.<\/p>\n
The film works. I sat, rapt, as the spectacle
unfolded. And spectacle is the right word
– action films are about watching Stuff
Happening Then Exploding but with enough
interesting character and plot elements to
lead you through it, without distracting from
the important explosions. Otherwise
we’ll just be watching a Michael Bay
film.<\/p>\n