home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0528>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: The Arts & Media:Show Business
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 90
- Show Business
- Back From Boot Hill
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After years in eclipse, westerns are in vogue again. But it's
- the West through a new '90s prism.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Alan Ladd rides off into the vast Western sky in Shane. Henry
- Fonda, as Wyatt Earp, kicks up his feet in front of the saloon
- in My Darling Clementine. Marshal Dillon stares down Dodge City's
- main street, and the boys of the Ponderosa sit tall in the saddle
- together. Few images in popular entertainment have the primal
- resonance of those from the classic westerns. Or at least they
- used to. The western, a genre that once proliferated on the
- big screen and small, until quite recently seemed to be one
- step away from Boot Hill.
- </p>
- <p> Today westerns are back, guns blazing. The immediate impetus
- is a series of unexpected hits: CBS's high-rated 1989 mini-series
- Lonesome Dove, based on Larry McMurtry's novel; the popular
- frontier series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman; and a pair of Oscar-winning
- films, Kevin Costner's Dances with Wolves and Clint Eastwood's
- Unforgiven. They have been more than enough to set off a modern
- Hollywood version of the Oklahoma land rush.
- </p>
- <p> Costner, Mel Gibson, Jodie Foster and Kurt Russell are among
- the stars who will don Western duds for upcoming movies. Two
- films based on the Wyatt Earp legend are in the works; so are
- movie versions of the popular TV series Bonanza and Maverick.
- In prime time the western is making a slow but notable return,
- with shows such as Fox's The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr.
- Ken Burns (The Civil War) is overseeing a 10-hour documentary
- series on the Old West, due in 1996. Lonesome Dove, meanwhile,
- has spawned one TV sequel, Return to Lonesome Dove (airing on
- CBS over three nights next week), and the promise of a second,
- based on McMurtry's own (and very different) follow-up, Streets
- of Laredo, published last summer.
- </p>
- <p> But if the Old West is back, it's not necessarily the West of
- old. Call it political correctness or a long-overdue historical
- corrective, but Hollywood's picture of the West has a grubbier,
- less celebratory, more multicultural look this time around.
- The moral verities are not so clear-cut. Indians--now Native
- Americans--are more likely to be tragic heroes than whooping
- villains. Women and blacks, long ignored, are major participants
- at last. These adjustments reflect the revisionist bent of much
- recent historical writing about the West--the view that America's
- westward expansion was not the triumphal taming of the frontier
- but a morally dubious enterprise in which a race of people was
- conquered, the environment ravaged and democratic values frequently
- trampled.
- </p>
- <p> Hollywood's depiction of the West, of course, has always changed
- according to the times. In the years before and after World
- War II, westerns were poetic, patriotic odes to the frontier
- spirit. In the 1950s, westerns like High Noon served as allegories
- through which contemporary social issues could be played out.
- During the Vietnam era, the genre turned more cynical and ambiguous,
- reflecting doubts about America's might and the morality of
- violence.
- </p>
- <p> Disillusionment over Vietnam helped cause the western virtually
- to disappear from the theaters and network TV for nearly two
- decades. Now it is being viewed through a fresh '90s prism.
- Richard Slotkin, an American-studies professor at Connecticut's
- Wesleyan University, points out that westerns have traditionally
- provided "a way of testing out different ways of looking at
- the past. The events of the past 20 or 30 years--in such areas
- as race relations, the ecology movement, the relationship between
- Native Americans and the government--are all being revisited
- through the western." Notes Burns: "History isn't really about
- the past--settling old scores. It's about defining the present
- and who we are."
- </p>
- <p> Consider the life of Wyatt Earp. The frontier lawman was romanticized
- in earlier films and a TV series as a paragon of moral virtue
- and gunfighting prowess. In Wyatt Earp, scheduled to be released
- next summer, Costner portrays the complete Earp, a gambler and
- businessman who lived nearly 50 years after the famous gunfight
- at the O.K. Corral.
- </p>
- <p> Tombstone, the competing Wyatt Earp saga (due in theaters next
- month), sticks to more familiar terrain, but with a contemporary
- spin. Tombstone, Arizona, is a boomtown beset by very recognizable
- urban problems. "Normal people are terrorized by gangs," says
- producer Jim Jacks. "The cowboy gang of the Clanton brothers
- wear red sashes around their waist. We use gang colors." Notes
- Kurt Russell, who stars as Earp: "In terms of violence, Tombstone
- made South Central look like the Garden of Eden."
- </p>
- <p> Geronimo, another Christmas release, was held up for years,
- according to producer-director Walter Hill, by his insistence
- that a Native American be cast in the lead role. (Wes Studi,
- of The Last of the Mohicans, finally got the part.) The film
- presents a more sympathetic picture of the Apache warrior than
- in westerns past. "This film examines the social and cultural
- tragedy of the Apache nation in the latter part of the 19th
- century," says Hill. "It's about the end of a culture."
- </p>
- <p> Women too are getting an aggressive re-examination. In Bad Girls,
- due next spring, four prostitutes quit their business and strike
- out on their own, a sort of Thelma & Louise on horseback. "It's
- what freedom felt like at a time when the only value placed
- on a woman was as a wife," says executive producer Lynda Obst.
- In Maverick, another spring release, Mel Gibson plays the wisecracking
- gambler, who this time is teamed with a card sharp played by
- Jodie Foster.
- </p>
- <p> Blacks have become more visible as well, though with less self-consciousness.
- Morgan Freeman played Clint Eastwood's best friend in Unforgiven,
- and Return to Lonesome Dove features both a black villain (Dennis
- Haysbert) and a black hero (Louis Gossett Jr.). But race does
- not become an issue in either film. Hollywood's reinterpretation
- in this case follows historical fact. "By some estimates, 25%
- of the cowboys during the heyday of the range-cattle trade were
- African Americans," says Slotkin. "It's really a very neglected
- aspect of American history."
- </p>
- <p> Not that westerns must, or necessarily should, be historically
- precise. The Old West provides a mythic setting whose power
- is not dependent on its faithfulness to fact. Dr. Quinn, Medicine
- Woman focuses on a female doctor (Jane Seymour) who moves to
- a Colorado town and adopts three orphaned children. Her weekly
- crusades for everything from environmental protection to gun
- control seem laughably anachronistic, but the show provides
- a bucolic backdrop for an exploration of social, ethical and
- family issues.
- </p>
- <p> Lonesome Dove, by contrast, was perhaps the most realistic picture
- of the Old West TV has ever presented, its often shocking bursts
- of violence suffused with a lyrical stoicism. Return to Lonesome
- Dove, however, is less a sequel than a lazy recycling of scraps
- from older, blander westerns. Captain Woodrow Call (Jon Voight
- replacing Tommy Lee Jones) makes a second trek from Texas to
- Montana, this time to drive a herd of horses, while his unacknowledged
- son (Rick Schroder) goes to work for a powerful cattle baron.
- In place of the hardscrabble poetry of the original is a meandering
- frontier soap opera, which lopes at a pace that could put tumbleweed
- to sleep.
- </p>
- <p> What accounts for the western's resurgence? Industry watchers
- point to a general revival of interest in Western clothing and
- memorabilia, the boom in country music and the appeal of a rural
- life-style at a time when urban problems seem more oppressive
- than ever. The old-fashioned moral values of the frontier also
- seem especially inviting today. "In westerns," says CBS Entertainment
- chief Jeff Sagansky, "the bad guys are bad not because they
- were abused kids or temporarily insane. They are bad, and they
- meet their end. There's a catharsis the audience is allowed
- to feel that they don't get in society."
- </p>
- <p> The western's long hiatus has also given the format new room
- to roam. Patricia Limerick, a professor at the University of
- Colorado and a leading revisionist historian, sees the end of
- the cold war as liberating. "We don't have to create an image
- and an ideology of ourselves as heroic expanders of the frontier
- and innocents who fight evil," she says. "All of that cold war
- fervor that drove the old westerns has lifted, so you can do
- more complex and interesting westerns." At a time when gritty
- urban realism and literal-minded docudramas hold sway, westerns
- are a refreshing departure. They provide escape, but also a
- chance to confront issues of universal significance and spiritual
- weight: a history lesson, but also a reminder of the imaginative
- power of myth and allegory. All that and a lot of pretty scenery
- too.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-