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Tom Hanks’s ‘News Of The World’ Takes A Minimalist Approach To The Western
The Federalist ^ | December 28, 2020 | Josh Shepherd

Posted on 12/28/2020 7:40:50 AM PST by Kaslin

Beautifully shot yet muted as a drama, ‘News of the World’ brings the post-Civil War Southwest to life in the unlikely journey of a lost girl and a jaded veteran who helps her find home.


Ten years ago, auteur filmmaker brothers Joel and Ethan Coen brought a surprisingly sincere revisionist Western to the big screen over Christmas weekend. Out last weekend in theaters, “News of the World” offers a similar throwback film without quite the edge or mass appeal.

The Coens’ 2010 take on “True Grit,” a remake of the John Wayne classic, followed a grizzled U.S. Marshal (Jeff Bridges) and no-nonsense Texas Ranger (Matt Damon) who escort a farm girl across frontier terrain. It garnered ten Academy Award nominations and wide acclaim. A decade later, two Hollywood veterans are employing a similar formula for their first Western.

Director Paul Greengrass has long been distinguished for his biopic dramas, including fast-paced 9/11 thriller “Flight 93” and modern-day high-seas rescue story “Captain Phillips,” which featured Tom Hanks as the eponymous freighter captain who must retake his vessel from pirates. The top actor has become known for dozens of real-life roles, most recently in this summer’s World War II drama “Greyhound.”

Now Greengrass and Hanks reunite for “News of the World,” based on a recent best-selling novel that unfolds in post-Civil War Texas. As a newsman who travels from town to town, Hanks’s character happens upon an orphaned girl whose plight redirects him to another destination.

Fans of American Westerns will doubtless enjoy this big-budget film, a slow-moving story with visual energy thanks to top-tier behind-the-scenes talent. Shot chiefly in Sante Fe, New Mexico, cinematographer Dariusz Wolski (“Pirates of the Caribbean” series) makes sparse landscapes pop, in scenes spurred on by an understated score from composer James Newton Howard (known for “Defiance” and “The Hunger Games”).

Thematically, “News of the World” clearly wants to speak to current issues of literacy education, “fake news,” and even racial prejudice. However, the film’s sparse dialogue and lack of conflict leave its core ideas largely underdeveloped.

There Is No Time for Stories’

In the film, Hanks portrays Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd, a former Confederate officer and frontier journalist who stages public readings of headlines for working-class families. His discovery of an overturned covered wagon leads him to Johanna, a ten-year-old girl (Helena Zengel) who years earlier had been abducted by an American Indian tribe. In a move everyone saw coming, Tom “America’s Dad” Hanks quickly assumes a paternal role with the orphan.

Through travel documents and clues, Kidd learns of her living family members and makes this reunion his central mission. It’s a premise used to great effect in “The Mandalorian,” Disney’s hit Star Wars streaming series. While this film lacks any hyperspace travel or aliens, it play on similar themes of connection and fatherhood. Struggling to communicate with a girl who speaks no English, the war-weary veteran lights up even at small victories like learning her name.

This minimalist story approach contrasts with the whip-smart scripting of “True Grit,” where young lead Hailee Steinfeld exchanged rapid-fire barbs throughout with her adult co-stars. “News of the World” leaves charismatic Hanks to capably bear much of the plot development, as mostly silent Zengel tags along with him to grimy Old West towns.

People they encounter are carving out a hardscrabble existence following the massive death toll of the Civil War, which historians estimate at more than 600,000 men. Equal parts newsman, showman, and storyteller, Kidd uses his public news readings to educate and entertain.

News of the World Featurette - A Look Inside (2020)

By the film’s third act, viewers can tell the filmmakers cast these scenes as a metaphor for their craft. In the film’s closing minutes, an antagonist dismisses Kidd’s suggestion that his young charge be given an opportunity to read. “There is no time for stories,” the man spits back.

Perils and Perspectives

Such meta-themes—along with the film’s attention to issues of racial prejudice, xenophobia, and human trafficking—are reminders it springs from a novel written only four years ago. Similar to revisionist Westerns like “Dances with Wolves,” this drama strives to view the American frontier from multiple perspectives to take in a more complete story.

In an early subplot where vigilante traffickers eye Johanna as potential prey, the film’s depiction of the issue feels almost contemporary, ripped from current Pornhub-related headlines. Another central sequence finds Kidd entering a backwater settlement hostile to any outsiders, with an unelected town leader stirring up prejudice against ethnic minorities as the scapegoat for his misdeeds.

Bringing in another perspective, “News of the World” does not sugarcoat the girl’s loss of family members to a Native American raiding party. Nor does it romanticize the difficulties of frontier life, with flash floods, wagon travel, and shoot-outs depicted as perilous endeavors.

Produced by indisputably talented filmmakers and carried by a circumspect Hanks performance, “News of the World” has some charms as a window into the often-overlooked post-Civil War era. Still, if given the opportunity to see this one or rewatch 2010’s hardy “True Grit,” it wouldn’t take a duel with pistols at high noon to determine the winner.

Rated PG-13 for violence, disturbing images, thematic material, and some language, “News of the World”


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: drama; filmreview; historicaldrama; moviereview; movies; newsoftheworld; paulgreengrass; tomhanks; westerns
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To: Zuriel

Can’t remember the movie but it was supposedly set in Iowa.

In the background were mountains. Iowa has some very flat areas and some very very hilly areas. But nothing approaching mountainous.

People in the theater (in Iowa) laughed out loud when the supposed location was revealed.


41 posted on 12/28/2020 8:45:11 AM PST by John Milner (Marching for Peace is like breathing for food. )
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To: kiryandil

“little girls”...Shouldn’t they have given the role to Slo Joe, then?


42 posted on 12/28/2020 8:48:47 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom ("Inside Every Progressive Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out" -- David Horowitz)
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To: Zuriel

The costumer did a good job of rumpling the hat, huh? One quick fold.

The neatly trimmed beard line on the neck is another giveaway. Those guys trekking through the desert catching a shave every couple months had to have that crisp line every day.

I especially like war movies where the guys are freshly shaved every day. I just watched “The Big Red One” and it took those WW II combat veterans about two years to begin to show some scruff.


43 posted on 12/28/2020 8:52:32 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom ("Inside Every Progressive Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out" -- David Horowitz)
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To: Sans-Culotte

Campbell was bad in the original for sure. Katherine Hepburn is one of my least favorite actresses, so that’s a second strike against the original version for me. By the time True Grit was filmed her voice was like fingernails on a blackboard. On the bright side, Bettie Page gave Hepburn’s skills in the bedroom a very positive review.


44 posted on 12/28/2020 8:58:13 AM PST by Roadrunner383
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To: V_TWIN

I loved Raising Arizona and O Brother, Where Art Thou? They were hysterical.


45 posted on 12/28/2020 9:01:06 AM PST by EinNYC
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

[The neatly trimmed beard line on the neck is another giveaway. Those guys trekking through the desert catching a shave every couple months had to have that crisp line every day.]


I expect the issue is presenting a recognizable looking Tom Hanks to appeal to his legions of fans who are used to a certain look. Showing him looking like the patriarch of Duck Dynasty or a fully paid-up member of the Taliban might detract from box office grosses.


46 posted on 12/28/2020 9:02:09 AM PST by Zhang Fei (My dad had a Delta 88. That was a car. It was like driving your living room.)
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To: V_TWIN

I too love the Cohen brothers movies.

I still love the characters in the original “True Grit”.
Maybe just because John Wayne was so much bigger than life.
He was a great American. It is kind of like remaking an Elvis movie(without Elvis) or “The Godfather” and replacing Marlon Brando.

FYI, I just watched “A Serious Man” for the first time this past weekend. Talk about a black comedy. I might have to watch it again.

I have not watched “Miller’s Crossing” in 10+ years. Time to watch that again.


47 posted on 12/28/2020 9:11:32 AM PST by woodbutcher1963
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To: EinNYC

Yep. Oh brother was great.....in spite of Psycotic liberal George LOONEY.

He did have a great line though...

“Damn, we’re in a tight spot!”

To this day I still use that.


48 posted on 12/28/2020 9:12:09 AM PST by V_TWIN (Where's Hunter???)
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To: Roadrunner383

I think you are confusing “True Grit” with the follow up movie “Rooster Cogburn”. RC had Hepburn in it. TG did not.


49 posted on 12/28/2020 9:16:27 AM PST by woodbutcher1963
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To: Zuriel

The mountain hunting scenes in “The Deer Hunter” were filmed in British Columbia not the mountains of Pennsylvania where the movie took place.

Not to mention that the particular species of deer in the hunting scenes does not live anywhere near the Alleghany mountains. It certainly was not a Whitetail Deer.

Directors take liberties for dramatic effect. At least the Vietnam war scenes were filmed in Thailand.


50 posted on 12/28/2020 9:23:38 AM PST by woodbutcher1963
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To: Kaslin
We watched News of the World last night. Thought it was pretty good but it deviated from the book (which I liked a lot) quite a bit.

As for True Grit, the later version was by far the best IMO and I'm a huge John Wayne fan.

Can think of no westerns better than The Searchers and Red River.

51 posted on 12/28/2020 9:29:11 AM PST by Texan
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To: John Milner

Yeah the closest thing to seeing mountains in IA would have to be viewing the Miss river bluff in spots between Dubuque and the MN border.


52 posted on 12/28/2020 9:30:52 AM PST by Zuriel (Acts 2:38,39....Do you believe it?)
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To: Zhang Fei

“...patriarch of Duck Dynasty”
“...fully paid-up member of the Taliban”

LOL...great imagery, Zhang!

You are no doubt right. Same goes for the costumes. Who wants to see filthy, mud-caked, and very smelly people?


53 posted on 12/28/2020 9:40:06 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom ("Inside Every Progressive Is A Totalitarian Screaming To Get Out" -- David Horowitz)
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To: TheDandyMan

I too loved the 2010 True Grit.
The dialog and action was tremendous.


54 posted on 12/28/2020 9:44:35 AM PST by Jim Pelosi
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To: DrHFrog
And news flash to the producer /director and cinematographer, there are NO MOUNTAINS between Wichita Falls and Dallas!!

Shocking

Next you are going to tell me this wasn't filmed in Central Pennsylvania


55 posted on 12/28/2020 10:01:37 AM PST by qam1 (There's been a huge party. All plates and the bottles are empty, all that's left is the bill to pay)
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To: woodbutcher1963

Saw the movie back when it came out. I remember thinking, during the russian rulette scene in the jungle huts: “the enemy is so drunk that they are giving a gun to prisoners, and then loading two bullets in it as per a prisoner’s request? Seriously??” I almost got up and walked out.


56 posted on 12/28/2020 10:26:37 AM PST by Zuriel (Acts 2:38,39....Do you believe it?)
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To: V_TWIN

Try “Blood Simple” their first one. I thought it was amazing when I saw it back when.


57 posted on 12/28/2020 10:30:23 AM PST by dynachrome ( “The people have spoken . . . and they must be punished.” Ed Koch)
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To: kiryandil
Wasn't Hanks implicated in that scandal with Harvey Wienstein ? Seems he dropped out of sight for sometime and now he resurfaces. Weird.
58 posted on 12/28/2020 10:31:38 AM PST by jmacusa (If we're all equal how is diversity our strength?)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Man, there hasn’t been a real Western movie in ages. You know, the kind of “Cowboys And Indians’’ pictures of our youth.


59 posted on 12/28/2020 10:33:02 AM PST by jmacusa (If we're all equal how is diversity our strength?)
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To: woodbutcher1963

Correction. It’s been a looong time; had to refresh my memory by viewing the scene. I remember quietly mocking the absurdity of the scene to my horrified young wife; of Deniro’s character stealing the extra bullet(s) from the enemy soldier, and during the yelling, putting them in the gun without looking. After he empties it into a couple of dudes, he take an ak and blows everybody away.

I went to that movie, looking to take it seriously (a close friend of my mother lost her only son to that war. A fine young man); and i do remember thinking of walking out. It wasn’t supposed to be like a spaghetti western.


60 posted on 12/28/2020 11:00:02 AM PST by Zuriel (Acts 2:38,39....Do you believe it?)
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