The world premiere of The Journeyman, the feature
debut of Austin native James Crowley, at SXSW (the
South by Southwest Film Festival) on Saturday March
10th 2001, was, as we might say in Scotland, mental.
The film is a Western, shot in Western Texas, by
Texans, and features what seemed to be most of the
audience in the beautifully preserved Paramount
Theater (or their families, or their friends). And
frankly, it was kinda tricky to treat the film as a
film, and not as an element in the spectacle of a
premiere. Okay, so I don't get to a lot of premieres,
but I was there with someone who does, who informed me
that it's not entirely normal for every new character
to appear on the screen to be greeted by enormous
whoops and cheers. This was particularly bizarre when
the character was clearly bad. But it was pretty cool
anyway.
The Journeyman's press materials say it is
influenced by the Sergio Leone spaghetti Westerns, but
in some ways, this is underselling the film. It is a
tale (like many Leone movies) of family, betrayal,
violence, revenge and, er, drug abuse. And it goes
like this ...
One young boy is watching his brother repeatedly fail
to mount a horse in a corral, haranguing him while he
hits the dirt over and over. Meanwhile, Dad (Willie
Nelson) is greeting a bunch of surly gun-toting types
who've just arrived and are clearly not nice blokes.
Exit Dad, courtesy of a moderately deranged cowboy
(Arie Verveen). The older son is kidnapped by the gang
and the younger boy (hiding under the shit-house out
back) is eventually rescued by a silent, black-clad
rider, who is kind of a Priest-With-No-Name.
Cut to "13 years later." In a grim nowheresville town,
the traveling prostitutes ("Gore's Whores") are
servicing the local miners when a robbery commences at
the paymaster's office. In the ensuing shoot-out, one
thief (L.J. Burleston) is shot dead, a second (Walter
P Higgs, III) is wounded but escapes. The third
robber, the thin and emotionless Morphinist (Brad
Hunt), makes off with the money and a bag full of
morphine, leaving a trail of bodies in his wake. Along
comes a silent rider called the Journeyman (Daniel
Lapaine). True to his name, he's looking for any kind
of work, and is persuaded by the mine owner (a
particularly brilliant Barry Corbin) to join the posse
pursuing the Morphinist. During this pursuit, the body
count mounts quite spectacularly and in a way that is
unlikely to be embraced by a major studio: the dead
are mostly unarmed innocents, including men, women and
children from diverse ethnic backgrounds. That the
brothers (you worked that out already, right?)
eventually meet is never in doubt. But the ending is
as ambiguous as much of the rest of the film, and
maybe even a little frustrating. You'll just have to
make up your own mind, I guess.
It's a low budget film, with some awkward pacing and
occasionally wobbly supporting performances. On the
other hand, the soundtrack captures much of the epic
grandeur of Ennio Morricone's greatest work, and the
burnt out vistas of West Texas are often gorgeous. It
looks great and sounds great and, if you're prepared
to overlook the plot holes, it's a compelling story of
brotherly love and loyalty, good and evil. The junkie
killer is truly repellent and Hunt plays him with more
than a little Gary Oldman-esque psychosis (see, for
instance, Oldman's pre-murder-spree pill-popping in
Leon), though LaPaine's Journeyman is much blander,
and it's more difficult to see what makes him tick.
Lastly, there are no substantive female characters at
all. The only one who does anything (Assumpta Serna)
is still playing a perfunctory role, and the story
would play out in exactly the same way without her.
So, is it any good? Well, yes. The film was finished
only about three days before the screening at SXSW,
and it's possible there'll be some fine-tuning before
distribution. With a final polish, The Journeyman
might be a feature debut as important as Robert
Rodriguez's El Mariachi. Kick ass.