Monday, July 1, 2024

Horizon: An American Saga Chapter 1

Last night I decided to see Kevin Costner's Horizon: An American Saga Chapter 1 because I really respect it when someone is willing to take a risk for something they are passionate about (this is why I am also eagerly awaiting Francis Ford Coppola's Megalopolis).  A group of rogue Apache stage a raid on a new settlement in the San Pedro Valley and massacre most of the inhabitants.  One survivor, a young boy named Russell Ganz (Etienne Kellici), joins a group of bounty hunters, led by a tracker (Jeff Fahey) interested in trading scalps for money, in order to get revenge.  Two other survivors, Frances Kitteredge (Sienna Miller) and her daughter Lizzie (Georgia MacPhail), follow Lt. Trent Gephardt (Sam Worthington) to the military fort Camp Gallant.  A horse trader named Hayes Ellison (Costner) arrives in the Wyoming Territory and, after he inadvertently runs afoul of brothers Junior and Caleb Sykes (Jon Beavers and Jamie Campbell Bower, respectively) as they search for the woman (Jena Malone) who shot their father and took their son, he flees with a prostitute (Abbey Lee) who was caring for the child.  On the Santa Fe Trail, Matthew Van Weyden (Luke Wilson) leads a group of covered wagons traveling west but an English couple, Juliette Chesney (Ella Hunt) and Hugh Proctor (Tom Payne), stirs up trouble within the group.  Tying the disparate narratives together is a poster, printed by Bailey Pickering (Giovanni Ribisi) and carried by many of the characters, advertising Horizon, the settlement attacked by the Apache.  This feels very much like the first episode of a TV miniseries where lots of characters and plots, which are sometimes hard to keep track of due to some major issues with pacing, are tantalizingly introduced but not developed or connected (there is even a montage at the end featuring scenes from the next episode).  Having said that, I do feel invested enough in the fate of these characters to see Chapter 2 (which will be released in August).  I also think the beautiful and sweeping cinematography, which showcases the grandeur of the West (it was filmed in Utah where I live), warrants releasing this on the big screen rather than as a TV show.  I did end up enjoying this (I really liked Costner's performance and direction) but I can only recommend it to people who are willing to commit to the entire saga (which could be four separate movies) because it definitely does not work as a standalone.

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