Sampson Moses, the corrupt mayor of Brambles, Texas, hires a deadly gunfighter to remove orphaned landowner Billy, since a railroad company wants his land. Tough lawyer Neil Morris tries to ... Read allSampson Moses, the corrupt mayor of Brambles, Texas, hires a deadly gunfighter to remove orphaned landowner Billy, since a railroad company wants his land. Tough lawyer Neil Morris tries to settle things peacefully to no avail.Sampson Moses, the corrupt mayor of Brambles, Texas, hires a deadly gunfighter to remove orphaned landowner Billy, since a railroad company wants his land. Tough lawyer Neil Morris tries to settle things peacefully to no avail.
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Gary Mitchell Carter
- Junior Moses
- (as Gary Carter)
- Director
- Writer
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This movie is probably more than most will bear to sit through, as a first impression the afflicted work gives is that it must have been hastily cobbled together from footage removed from the cutting room floor, since it is virtually unintelligible. Its initial frames are composed of text that provides background for what follows, i.e., a group of former Northern (Union) troops make their way back to their homes in Texas immediately following the War Between The States under leadership of a former sergeant, Sampson Moses, played by Robert Vaughn, slaughtering erstwhile Confederate soldiers along with their families, wherever they find them. Settling in a ghost town called Brambles, the former Unionists restore the town by day, while continuing their marauding during the evenings, Moses having declared himself mayor of the hamlet and building a combination jail/insane asylum to confine ex-Rebels and their kin who have been taken prisoner rather than butchered. The actual filmed action begins twenty years later, in 1885, and it is consistently challenging to locate a semblance of sense within any of it; among the many disparate plot elements are included: a group of Confederate offspring in their twenties, who refer to themselves as the Waterhole Gang, are clashing with Moses and his companions, including their offspring, the two groups gaily and ineffectively flinging rocks at each other; one of the Gang, an illiterate, courts Sampson's daughter Delilah (Lisa Cangelosi) by learning how to read (his primer is Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet from which he is soon quoting entire passages); murders frequently occur, the victims not only having a large "WH" (Water Hole) branded upon their foreheads, but also being somehow completely and immediately desiccant, as well; many of the female characters are seen with bared breasts to little narrative purpose; a mob of escaped "insane" prisoners lurch evenly through the town holding torches, their demeanour being evocatory of the flagellants in Bergman's SEVENTH SEAL in combination with Romero's zombies in NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD; et alia. Scene after scene chaotically passes during this choppily edited affair, leaving behind a stream of unanswered questions, and if there is a climax to this thing, a viewer probably will not be able to identify it or, indeed, to comprehend relationships among the characters, most of whom as depicted are seemingly as confused as will be an audience. Anachronisms are rife within the dialogue, and costumes as well, for this mess shot with video tape (often hand-held!), yet it is the general incompetence of those responsible for this production that will cause viewers to watch numbly as each sequence beggars its predecessor for folly, with only the lush natural landscape where the film was shot in the hill country of south central Texas being of worth. Post production efforts are substandard, as well, in particularly in relation to sound quality but, above all else, a bizarre script leaves little with which to work, and casting choices are often grotesque, with few of the actors capable of playing into their roles, only Cangelosi being impressive here. Willie Nelson, billed second, appears briefly in but two scenes, with few lines, shot mainly in closeup, and generally with an owlish stare, most likely reflecting his wonderment as to why in the world he became involved with this tripe.
I worked 14 days on this picture. I supplied props, which included nearly all of the guns and all the gun leather. I supplied at least a third of the costume.I started out as crew but was given bits to do as the town drunk, including having Mr Vaughn knock me down. In the scene where the Indian throws the tomahawk past the girl's head, I am the one who did that stunt. After getting a haircut and shave, I was given the part of the orderly when the actor cast for that part didn't show up. It is not the worst film that I ever worked on. The others just never made it to video or the screen. It had some really nice people working on it. I enjoyed knowing them. I feel privileged to have worked on this film, if for no other reason than the experience it afforded me. Town drunk/Orderly
I am giving this film two stars because it is earnest, and also because it had some backing behind it. Otherwise, it's pretty much an amateurish exercise similar to shorts seen on Youtube.
The cinematography is fair for direct-to-video, and the editing is acceptable. The story is confused, the dialog inane, the acting below par for everyone except Mr. Vaughn (although second-billed, Willie Nelson merely walks on and off). There's also an anti-violence message at the end which makes no sense in the context of the rest of the film. Anachronisms abound which are very annoying.
Look, when you have an idea for a film, check it out with others. Also check it against history - if you're making a Western, but it doesn't look anything like a classic Western, then you're not making any kind of Western, don't do it. The classics exist to learn from. They endure. We don't need El Topo style allegories anymore - we didn't even need it back then.
The cinematography is fair for direct-to-video, and the editing is acceptable. The story is confused, the dialog inane, the acting below par for everyone except Mr. Vaughn (although second-billed, Willie Nelson merely walks on and off). There's also an anti-violence message at the end which makes no sense in the context of the rest of the film. Anachronisms abound which are very annoying.
Look, when you have an idea for a film, check it out with others. Also check it against history - if you're making a Western, but it doesn't look anything like a classic Western, then you're not making any kind of Western, don't do it. The classics exist to learn from. They endure. We don't need El Topo style allegories anymore - we didn't even need it back then.
as explained to me, this pic was filmed for marketing the script to studio execs and was never intended to be taken seriously on it's own merit. the actors were not only - for the most part - non professionals, most had little acting creditialing. they were random joes willing to risk credibility for the opportunity to be part of an undertaking that would immortalize them for posterity. in that regard, the film accomplishes exactly what it set out to accomplish: tell a story on a practically non-existent budget with characatures of real actors so the resultant 'movie' could pitch the script and hopefully be picked up by at least a B movie studio.
this movie should be viewed because of the absolute revelation that is OMARI MILLER's talent. when i saw him acting in this film, i felt like i knew that it was like for audiences in the 70's to see the debut of a young Bobby Deniro or to see Semour Cassel in the early Cassavette's films. i wonder how life is for young MILLER these days because surly to have such talent is a blessing and a curse. a blessing because he is able to soar to great heights with his talent at his disposal, and a curse because other actors must hate him so much that they will never have that kind of talent and wisdom running through their veins. young Miller, wherever you are, I, and anyone else in the world that cherishes freedom and beauty, SALUTE YOU!
Did you know
- SoundtracksMorning Sky
Performed by Harvey Schmidt
Written by Barbara Ross
Details
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Water Hole Gang
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
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