My latest addition to my home collection...
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (John Sturges / 1957)
Not necessarily my favorite Wyatt Earp / Doc Holliday / Tombstone / O.K. Corral film - or even my favorite John Sturges film - but this is definitely a classy, well-made example of a Hollywood Western from the late '50s. And the new 4K transfer is just beautiful. I've actually seen Sturges' 1967 quasi-sequel
Hour of the Gun (with James Garner and Jason Robards). Although I don't actually have it in my collection yet, I sort of regard that as slightly superior to this one. Interestingly enough,
Hour of the Gun was the
first movie to deal with the so-called Vendetta Ride,
beginning with the notorious gunfight and then dealing with the aftermath and consequences, whereas with the earlier films the gunfight itself was the be-all / end-all that everything led up to. (The more recent films, 1993's
Tombstone and 1994's
Wyatt Earp, also deal with the Vendetta Ride.)
And at the local theater...
August 20, 2024
ALIEN: ROMULUS (Fede Álvarez / 2024)
Well... what can I say? First of all, on the upside, it was actually pretty darn good overall. I've been an admirer of Fede Álvarez's past films - including the oft-underrated 2013
Evil Dead remake - and here I think he did the best job he possibly could. While I don't think it's as good as Mike Flanagan's
Doctor Sleep (2019) - in my opinion the Gold Standard of classic horror revisitations - it's also not the overly calculated franchise course correction that J.J. Abrams'
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) was. Chronologically speaking, it's sort of an "alternative sequel" to Ridley Scott's original
Alien from 1979,
not overriding the chronology or negating James Cameron's
Aliens from 1986. There are actually quite a few really cool twists in the story here, in particular the zero-gravity shootout setpiece in which our characters have to dodge the floating acidic alien blood. I also like the fact that for the first time, we actually have a concrete
reason why the big-bad Weyland-Yutani Corporation wants to get its hand on the Xenomorphic genome. It has to do with giving humanity a genetic boost to aid in the survival of humanity in the environments of less hospitable alien worlds marked for colonization. I also don't really mind the use of a certain now-deceased actor's facial and vocal likeness in the resurrection of a certain character from Ridley Scott's 1979 original. (You all probably know who it is at this point.) Hey, just so long as the actor's estate gets properly compensated! On the other hand,
Alien: Romulus is really not much more than a "greatest hits" reel of past franchise successes (albeit an effective one), blending the atmosphere and aesthetics of Scott's '79 original with the weaponry and action beats of Cameron's '86 sequel (as well as a shameless callback line) - with a hefty dose of the mad-science-gone-too-far excesses of 1997's
Alien Resurrection and Scott's own
Prometheus from 2012. And although Scott himself has been displaced from the director's chair now occupied by Álvarez, as producer he manages to maintain continuity and even throws in a few references to the myth-making of his previous two films in the franchise.
In short, a
very good franchise sci-fi / horror film, scary in places and maintaining the disturbing
frisson of the original concept. (The physical effects are quite visceral and gooey without being
overly reliant on CGI.) But I wouldn't necessarily call it a
classic by any means...