The Homesman - Dir. Tommy Lee Jones (2014)
Judging
by outward appearances, Tommy Lee Jones doesn't seem to be a jolly old fellow. No
surprise that Jones has chosen rather dour material for his directorial
efforts. His first film as director, The
Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, was a somber modern-day Western about
a rancher making his way to Mexico with the corpse of a ranch hand and the
Border Agent who killed him. You could hardly call Jones' sophomore feature, The Homesman, a traditional Western.
Sure, the period is appropriate, but white hats don't shoot it out with black
hats and the hero doesn't triumphantly ride off into the sunset.
The Homesman takes place during the
mid-1800's in the desolate territory now known as Nebraska. Life has been
harsh, especially for three women driven insane by the rigors of the frontier
and an overbearing patriarchal society. Arabella Sours (Grace Gummer) hasn't
even hit her 20's and has already lost her three children to diphtheria. Gro
Svendsen (Sonja Richter) went mad due to the death of her mother and repeated
sexual abuse by her husband. Theoline Bellknapp (Miranda Otto) suffered such a
nervous breakdown that she does something unthinkable. In the movie's most
harrowing moment, Theoline stumbles towards an outhouse and tosses her newborn
infant into the latrine.
The burgeoning town is hardly equipped to handle this pitiable trio, but a
church in Iowa has agreed to care for them. When it's clear their husbands are
either unable or unwilling to take them, Mary Bee Cuddy (Hilary Swank) volunteers
to embark on the journey. Perhaps, she feels a kinship to these women as she
hides her own crushing loneliness. Cuddy is 31 and unwed, making her a spinster
in everyone's eyes. She's been sharply turned down for marriage because she's
too "bossy" and too "plain."
As strong-willed as she is, Mary Bee knows she cannot make the trip on her own.
Due to happenstance, she comes across George Briggs (Jones), a buffoonish claim
jumper left to hang. Briggs agrees not so much out of chivalry, but to get out
of the noose along with $300 and a jug of whiskey.
The Homesman was based on a novel by
Glendon Swarthout, who also wrote The
Shootist, which was adapted into a film starring a grizzled John Wayne in
what would be his final role. Of course, Jones brings grizzled to a whole new
level. He's not exactly the most amiable of travel partners. The prim and
proper Mary Bee does not end up falling for the gruff Briggs the way Katherine
Hepburn did with Bogart in The African
Queen. In fact, The Homesman
never goes where you expect. The protagonists and their charges are outsiders
in a rigid culture. They don't find redemption, happiness or sanity.
Jones turns in a fine performance that goes beyond his trademark surliness. He
is able to go to dark place while playing the buffoon. Swank's success ratio
hasn't been that spectacular, but her work in The Homesman ranks right up there with Million Dollar Baby and her breakout role in Boys Don't Cry. It's a fierce and heartbreaking performance.
The Homesman has been called an anti-western and a feminist
revision of the genre. Jones' sophomore effort certainly has more in common with
the existentialism of McCabe and Mrs.
Miller and the beautiful bleakness of No
Country for Old Men. He unravels the romanticism of the Old West by presenting its ugliness without restraint. One of the more underrated films of 2014.
Rating: *** ½ (*****)
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