In der Goldgräberstadt Red Ridge kämpfen ein verrückter Sheriff und sein Hilfssheriff mit Gesetzlosen, die inmitten des Niedergangs der Stadt für Chaos sorgen.In der Goldgräberstadt Red Ridge kämpfen ein verrückter Sheriff und sein Hilfssheriff mit Gesetzlosen, die inmitten des Niedergangs der Stadt für Chaos sorgen.In der Goldgräberstadt Red Ridge kämpfen ein verrückter Sheriff und sein Hilfssheriff mit Gesetzlosen, die inmitten des Niedergangs der Stadt für Chaos sorgen.
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Among the thousands of TV and movie westerns I've seen, some have crossed over with sci-fi and the supernatural, like Cowboys & Aliens, Jonah Hex or a slew of totally forgettable flicks pitting cowpokes against vampires, zombies or other things that go bump in the night. This low-budget affair breaks a bit of new ground... more uniquely, perhaps, than laudably.
Red Ridge is a dusty, nowhere little town of dashed hopes, founded on the promise of a gold rush that never materialized, leaving a handful of bored residents. Even the local outlaw gang that harasses the folks can't rustle up a decent living. The sheriff (Owen Williams) and his deputy (Trent Culkin - apparently no relation to the other Culkins in the biz) seem like good guys, but hardly the stuff of which legends are made. Adding to the sheriff's sense of being overmatched are ghostly hallucinations that start driving him nuts. He sees dead people (none of whom look anything like Bruce Willis) and doesn't know why. Or handle it well.
There are a few holdups and shootings, with a couple of unlikely deaths. The gang gets smaller and the town's sparse population takes a few hits. The sheriff is more of a thinker than a doer. Oddly, his only book is about thermodynamics. But the most unusual part of this isn't the ghosties. It's the only western I can recall in which absolutely no one rides a horse! A couple pull the stagecoach in one scene. But no one's ever in a saddle, and none are even tied to hitching posts along the street. (Maybe the Equine Actors' Guild was on strike when the shoot was scheduled. As Westerns have gone out of favor, most of its members may be heavily saddled with debt, and that ain't hay. Jus' speculatin' here, folks.)
Writer Brandon Cahela and several of the credited producers filled supporting roles. Another sign of limited funding.
All in all, the film is a low-key curiosity that might work for you, now that you know not to expect much in the way of f/x or adrenaline stirring.
Red Ridge is a dusty, nowhere little town of dashed hopes, founded on the promise of a gold rush that never materialized, leaving a handful of bored residents. Even the local outlaw gang that harasses the folks can't rustle up a decent living. The sheriff (Owen Williams) and his deputy (Trent Culkin - apparently no relation to the other Culkins in the biz) seem like good guys, but hardly the stuff of which legends are made. Adding to the sheriff's sense of being overmatched are ghostly hallucinations that start driving him nuts. He sees dead people (none of whom look anything like Bruce Willis) and doesn't know why. Or handle it well.
There are a few holdups and shootings, with a couple of unlikely deaths. The gang gets smaller and the town's sparse population takes a few hits. The sheriff is more of a thinker than a doer. Oddly, his only book is about thermodynamics. But the most unusual part of this isn't the ghosties. It's the only western I can recall in which absolutely no one rides a horse! A couple pull the stagecoach in one scene. But no one's ever in a saddle, and none are even tied to hitching posts along the street. (Maybe the Equine Actors' Guild was on strike when the shoot was scheduled. As Westerns have gone out of favor, most of its members may be heavily saddled with debt, and that ain't hay. Jus' speculatin' here, folks.)
Writer Brandon Cahela and several of the credited producers filled supporting roles. Another sign of limited funding.
All in all, the film is a low-key curiosity that might work for you, now that you know not to expect much in the way of f/x or adrenaline stirring.
Lame western. Dreadful dialogue and acting to match it. No idea what it was trying to be. Part western, part ghost story. Listed as a horror but thats just the production values. Just when you think it cant get any worse it does. The acting is so wooden it sits perfectly with the cheap sets. No clue who the cast is, never heard of them and probably never will again. I've seen TV commercials more convincing. I usually enjoybwesterns but this is enough to put you off for life. How someone gave this the green light to start filming and put money behind it is beyond me. I dont like being negative but this was awful.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
This was a good movie with an original story line. Worth seeing. John Mars takes the cake as a mad man and Lena Wilcox as the Crazy chick.
Locally shot and produced.
And if you like the genre, a bit better than that. As in, a cut above the usual alcoholic sheriff dealing with your more or less standard bad guys and ghosts in a dying jerkwater town no self respecting gopher would dig a hole alongside for fear it'd reduce his property values, flick.
With the merit of some decent to pretty fair acting, a fair amount of action, a lot of it done on an outdoor set rather than in the phony and obvious indoor confinement of a sound stage (probably because they couldn't afford one, but still a good thing in my opinion), with real horses and period tack, convincing costumes. Without a single bad hat choice on any of the principal players or extras.
To sum up, worth your hour and a half, long as you're not expecting "High Noon", and better than the usual straight to vid dreck being churned out there these days.
With the merit of some decent to pretty fair acting, a fair amount of action, a lot of it done on an outdoor set rather than in the phony and obvious indoor confinement of a sound stage (probably because they couldn't afford one, but still a good thing in my opinion), with real horses and period tack, convincing costumes. Without a single bad hat choice on any of the principal players or extras.
To sum up, worth your hour and a half, long as you're not expecting "High Noon", and better than the usual straight to vid dreck being churned out there these days.
Although an entirely different genre.. if you saw ANY of the Paranomal Activity films you'll be aware that they were loooooooooong stretches of boring, monotonous scenes in order to lull the viewer into a pseudo coma.. then there was a sudden "punch" to try and scare.
That's this film.. but the loooooooong stretches of boring are REALLY clichéd western scenes. There's pretty much nothing original regarding the western aspect of this film.. and the "ghost" aspects, honestly, came across a more unintentionally humorous that anything else.
The leadh character (the Sheriff) walking around quoting Chaucer and Shakespeare in everyday conversation, then citing the quote assuming the person he was talking to was too ignorant to know, was.. well.. just made the character unlikable and he came across as an arrogant ass more than anything. So, there's little sympathy when the ghost stuff kicks in. Making the ghosts again, far more unintentional humorous or ridiculous than anything.
Acting was decent, which was kind of unexpected. It's not stunning for all characters, but it's passable.
No sex, no nudity, no real adult content - I don't recall any foul language, but may have missed a word or two - western violence (shootouts) but not a great deal of blood. Mostly just "thriller" type scenes interspersed with drama (forced drama really).
It was an interesting idea... but it just does not play out well at all.
----- PASS -----
That's this film.. but the loooooooong stretches of boring are REALLY clichéd western scenes. There's pretty much nothing original regarding the western aspect of this film.. and the "ghost" aspects, honestly, came across a more unintentionally humorous that anything else.
The leadh character (the Sheriff) walking around quoting Chaucer and Shakespeare in everyday conversation, then citing the quote assuming the person he was talking to was too ignorant to know, was.. well.. just made the character unlikable and he came across as an arrogant ass more than anything. So, there's little sympathy when the ghost stuff kicks in. Making the ghosts again, far more unintentional humorous or ridiculous than anything.
Acting was decent, which was kind of unexpected. It's not stunning for all characters, but it's passable.
No sex, no nudity, no real adult content - I don't recall any foul language, but may have missed a word or two - western violence (shootouts) but not a great deal of blood. Mostly just "thriller" type scenes interspersed with drama (forced drama really).
It was an interesting idea... but it just does not play out well at all.
----- PASS -----
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