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Tom Selleck, at
robust middle-age, seems to be carving out a new career both acting in and producing
westerns. An earlier Turner entry, Crossfire
Trail, which Selleck produced and in which he starred, proved to be popular with
TV audiences. Now TBS offers up another entry, Monte Walsh, and the results are,
at best, mixed. Where Crossfire Trail was a relatively modest and unassuming
effort, Monte Walsh is overlong at two and a half hours, over-cast with good
actors (most of whom who are given little to do), and overblown with pretension.
In the Wyoming Territory in 1892, Walsh and his sidekick Chet
Rollins (Keith Carradine) spend a hard winter tending cattle on the range. When they
return to town, they learn that the ranch where they worked, along with others in the
area, have all been sold to Consolidated Cattle, eastern corporate owners. Cal Brennan
(William Devane) has been hired as the manager and he hires Walsh and Rollins on as
cowhands. Cowboy work--independent, rugged, outdoors--is in contention with the
urban/financial/business interests.
On the range, the cowboys' values are observed. "Riding
fence" is the dreaded fate of those who are too old to herd cattle. The railroad
intrudes (smoke blowing, whistles shrieking to be sure the message of industry vs.
ranchers is noticed) and there's a fight between the cowboys and the railroad guys. Still,
life on the range is romanticized--singing, smoking, a fire, and the handsome landscape.
"All they got is freedom and pride and a set of rules," Brennan explains to the
corporate accountant.
In town, they find their women. Walsh is paired up with a hooker,
Martine (Isabella Rossellini), and Rollins romances the widow who owns the hardware store.
When Rollins and the widow decide to get married, it's another step towards the end of the
old ways--marriage and cowboys don't go together. "Nobody gets to be a cowboy
forever, Monte," Rollins says. A scene is thrown in with Wallace Shawn playing Texas
Jack Butler, a rodeo impresario in a ridiculous outfit, offering a job to Walsh, an expert
bronc buster. When some of the cowboys are laid off, one will go bad, presumably in
desperation, ultimately leading to a showdown with Walsh, the melodramatic climax of the
film--and rather beside the point.
The theme, of course, is the end of the "old west,"
particularly as it affected the lives of cowboys. John Ford looked at the changing
frontier in The
Man Who Shot Liberty Valence; Sam Peckinpah looked at the same changes from the
point of view of outlaws in The
Wild Bunch; Sergio Leone's Once
Upon a Time in the West framed it in terms of ranchers versus the railroad. In
all those films, though, the story was forefronted against the background of the
changing/declining West. Monte Walsh plays as if the writers (a committee of
four--beware multiple writers!) had made a list of cowboy attributes and how change was
closing in on their way of life, and then grafted the story on to demonstrate those
points. The result is episodic with so many barely connected bits and pieces that the
narrative momentum is largely lost. A "seven years later" epilogue is
completely gratuitous, rehashing points already made.
In its favor, producer Selleck once more delivers handsome western
landscapes and a certain dignity to the role of Walsh. Carradine and Devane, both actors
capable of much more, are never given much chance to shine in this material. The one
genuinely notable performance is by Rossellini; she takes this classic hooker with a heart
of gold and infuses the role with such warmth that the entire screen glows when she's on.
She expresses though the changing expressions on her face what the ordinary script barely
suggests. And she makes you wish you were seeing her in a better movie.
- Arthur Lazere