Thursday, January 26, 2006

Don't Come Knocking

2006 Sundance Film Festival
★ ★
I really wanted to like Don’t Come Knocking. It’s a contemporary Western by famed German director Wim Wenders, written by Pulitzer-Prize winner (and stud actor) Sam Sheppard, and including in the cast Sam’s main squeeze (and my first crush) Jessica Lange. With these credentials, I would have bet that Don’t Come Knocking would have been in my Top 5 at Sundance this year.

Not even close.

Here’s my #1 criterion for judging a movie: Did I care about the characters? Love ‘em or hate ‘em, either one is ok, they just have to mean enough to me to care about what happens to them. And unfortunately, I didn’t care two hoots about Howard Spence (Sheppard), the washed-up Western actor who tries to escape his past of hard living and general selfishness. I didn’t even care about Doreen (Lange), a former girlfriend from a movie shot in Butte, Montana. And I certainly didn’t care about Earl (Gabriel Mann), Doreen’s son, no matter how over-the-top obnoxious his behavior. Maybe I did care for Sky, the Butte native played by the remarkable Sarah Polley, who was clearly the most likable and the only truly compelling character in the movie. And Tim Roth’s portrayal of the studio bond man was interesting at least.

But beyond character development, this movie just didn’t have any direction, suffering from the thinnest of story lines and a pace that often needed a quick kick from Howard Spence’s spurs. It does feature some interesting locations and beautiful southern Utah landscapes. But that’s not why we go to movies.

Wenders and Sheppard go back to their collaboration on Paris, Texas in 1984, and they spoke very fondly of each other during the Q&A. They collaborated on the story over a period of years and have looked for a chance to work together again. I wish they would have produced something better.

Interesting Tidbit from the Q&A: Sheppard’s son Jesse is an expert horseman and did his father’s riding stunts for the movie. Sam Sheppard also rides well, but his contract limited his riding to a trot.

Second Interesting Tidbit: Wenders has wanted to shoot a film in Butte for twenty years, since his first visit there, and was concerned that someone else would film there before him.

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