Alamo, The (2004)

reviewed by
Laura Clifford


THE ALAMO
---------

As Sam Houston (Dennis Quaid, "The Rookie") works to sell the glories and

opportunities of Texas to Americans, young Lt. Col. Travis (Patrick Wilson,

HBO's "Angels in America") is sent to protect an old Spanish monastery, now

used as a fort, from the 'Napoleon of the West' and self-proclaimed emperor

Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna (Emilio Echervarrķa, "Die Another Day"). It is

here that history will be made as circumstance brings together Travis, Jim

Bowie (Jason Patric, "Narc"), American legend Davy Crockett (Billy Bob

Thornton, "Bad Santa") and less than two hundred volunteers to do what

Houston knows is impossible - defend "The Alamo."

Director Johnny Lee Hancock ("The Rookie") has been in post-production

reshaping this troubled film (producer Ron Howard left as director when

Disney refused to allow an R rating) since it was bumped from its original

Christmas release. While the PG-13 rating certainly softens the

gut-wrenching blow that could have been delivered, it is ultimately the

emphasis of events that keeps "The Alamo" from becoming the epic rouser it

was meant to be. Still, fine production values and an Oscar nomination

worthy performance from Billy Bob Thornton make "The Alamo" worthwhile.

This is the Cliff Notes version of the story, where the only notable

players are the famous names. Outside of the stars, the only characters of

note are Juan Seguin (Jordi Mollą, "Bad Boys II"), a representative of all

Mexican Texians, Bowie's sister-in-law Juana (Estephania LeBaron), who

stays because Bowie had loved and married her Mexican sister, and the

slaves Joe (Edwin Hodge) and Sam (Afemo Omilami). Recognizable character

actor Leon Rippy ("Eight Legged Freaks") gets a lot of face time, but

little opportunity or dialogue to flesh out Sgt. William Ward.

Houston's introduced as a sot who asks drinking buddy Jim Bowie to return

to the Alamo to retrieve a cannon. Travis is portrayed as a career soldier

so ambitious, he's abandoned his wife and children (Zooey Deschanel's

actress sister Emily arrives as his wife to serve divorce papers). He is

established in mutual loathing with Bowie before relieving the command of

Colonel Green Jameson (Tom Davidson), whose recall from the Alamo at the

command of Houston is unclear at best. Bowie arrives with a rag tag

partying band, contrasting sharply with Travis's more disciplined soldiers.

Davy Crockett shows up, presumably on Houston's earlier salesmanship,

surprised to hear that fighting may ensue. His wry acceptance of maybe

having to live up to his legend sets the stage for the encroaching battle.

Having not read the original screenplay (Leslie Bohem, "Dante's Peak,"

Stephen Gaghan, "Traffic" and Hancock) it is difficult to judge what was

removed from the final film, but the decision to keep a coda involving

Houston's "Remember the Alamo!" defeat of Santa Anna (a la Michael Bay's

"Pearl Harbor") while neglecting to provide the audience with the

historical reasons leading up to the massacre at the Alamo was

wrong-headed. While Santa Anna is portrayed as a ruthless warrior, one

could also deduce that he was freeing his own people from Texian land

grabbers and freeing slaves (nothing could be further from the truth).

Houston's war tactics (he used the real Napoleon's Waterloo as a template)

are interesting and the final twenty minutes erase previous, cowardly

impressions given of the man, but the final chapter also blunts the Alamo

heroics and steals the last act from the deserving Thornton.

And Billy Bob is simply great in this film, a living, breathing Davy

Crockett who views his stature with amused self deprecation and

understanding of people's need for heroes. The film's single greatest

scene is when the fiddle-playing Crockett defies Santa Ana's ritual of

having his troops play "Deguelo," a message meaning no mercy will be shown,

before the nightly pummeling of the fort. Hancock gets everything right in

this scene, directing cinematographer Dean Semler's ("We Were Soldiers")

camera in an ever expanding spiral from the impish Thornton's rooftop

fiddle harmony, all set against a glorious sunset. The portrayal of Santa

Ana's own troops' admiration for Crockett provides most of the film's humor.

Also fine is Wilson, who traverses a strong character arc with authority.

Patric sits out most of the film in a fever state. Quaid, having shown a

resurgence in "The Rookie" and "Far From Heaven," backslides here, playing

Houston in a state of jaw set constipation.

The production itself is beautiful. Production designer Michael Corenblith

("How the Grinch Stole Christmas") and art directors Lauren E. Polizzi

("EdTV") and Dan Webster ("How the Grinch Stole Christmas"), all Ron Howard

alumni, give the film a 'you are there' feel. Use of computer imagery is

apparent only fleetingly (most noticeably in a cannonball's point of view

sequence). Carter Burwell's ("The Ladykillers") score is stirring.

B-

For more Reeling reviews visit http://www.reelingreviews.com

==========
X-RAMR-ID: 37551
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1271109
X-RT-TitleID: 1131222
X-RT-SourceID: 386
X-RT-AuthorID: 1487
X-RT-RatingText: B-

The review above was posted to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due to ASCII to HTML conversion.

Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews