Doctor Strange
I'll Lock Up
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- Hudson Valley, NY
I haven't actually seen this Paul Newman film, but am dangerously close to purchasing a dvd copy of it. It is the 'Buffalo Bill and the Indians' film from 1976. I bought a book about Buffalo Bill in Britain just a few weeks back andtrue to form, I have become enthralled by the guy and, will do the subject to death...
Anybody seen this film one asks..??? The reviews are not exactly sparkling...
It is an interesting film, and very typical of director Robert Altman. However, it's only vaguely interested in the truth about Bill Cody or the west. Like Altman's films Nashville and A Prairie Home Companion, it's about the people surrounding an entertainment phenomenon, in this case Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. It's entirely about show biz, the truth and lies that underlie it, and the backstage manipulations that are required for the show to go on.
By setting it in the past - though keeping the characters and their motivations modern - Altman is able to make observations about what goes on backstage that relate to today's entertainment world as much as the Wild West Show. (E.g., Burt Lacaster's writer Ned Buntline is the actual creator of the Cody myth that's making Cody a fortune, but has been banished from Cody's inner circle.) Like all Altman films, it's an ensemble piece, and Newman's decidedly nonheroic, pragmatic take on Bill Cody as something of a pompous fraud is a far cry from earlier treatments.
Anyway, I liked it, but I'm a fan of Robert Altman's talky, complicated, observational films. If you expect a heroric or historically accurate treatment of the subject, you will be sorely disappointed.