7 Men from Now Movie Review
7 Men from Now Review
"7 Men from Now" Overview

Rating: NR
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Budd BoetticherProducer : Andrew V. McLaglen,Robert E. Morrison
Screenwiter : Burt Kennedy
Starring : Randolph Scott,Lee Marvin,Walter Reed,Gail Russell,Don Barry
It’s with a heavy heart that I admit this, both to readers and myself: nobody
cares about westerns anymore. Well, maybe Tommy Lee Jones, but he’s that
all-too-rare exception. It’s hard to imagine that not too long ago (the 1940s
and '50s) westerns were considered high entertainment, only exceeded by
comedies and musicals. And though the genre was dominated by masters like John
Ford and Howard Hawks, a film like Budd Boetticher’s 7 Men from Now still got
some attention from viewers. These days, without major critical hype and
publicity, you wonder if it would even make a bleep on the radar.
An obvious forbearer to Clint Eastwood’s groundbreaking Unforgiven, 7 Men
concerns Ben Stride (Randolph Scott), the former sheriff of Silver Springs and
a recently widowed drifter. Not a drifter without purpose, however. When seven
men held up a Wells Fargo office, they killed Stride’s wife and ran off with
twenty grand. In a chilling opening scene, Stride kills off two of them in a
small cave and then heads off to find the rest. Early in his mission he runs
across Annie and John Greer (Gail Russell and Walter Reed, respectively), a
couple heading to California to find their fortune. He also runs across an
ex-con that he locked up once, Bill Masters (the ever-brilliant Lee Marvin),
who agrees to help Stride for the possibility of picking up the stolen loot.
But, as always, nothing is as it seems.
Every character has a secret and Boetticher stages every scene with an astute
sense of mystery. Even by today standards, the tremendous script, by
first-timer Burt Kennedy, twists and turns in ways that modern thrillers (I’m
looking at you, Mindhunters) couldn’t even dream of accomplishing. Boetticher
and Kennedy never allow the audience to expect what is going to happen next,
and they both have an acute sense of the darkness that greed and vengeance
bring out in men.
At a scant 78 minutes, the film leaves no trace of fat. Every scene has an
otherworldly tension, even in the calm moments. Consider an early scene where
the Greers and Stride stop to wash horses: Annie goes to a small patch of river
to swim and sing while Stride and John wash down the animals. Between John
mentioning Silver Springs and the sound of Annie’s singing, Boetticher layers
the suspense of what happened in the past in Silver Springs while also planting
the seeds of romantic yearning between Stride and Annie. Both Russell and Reed
bring brooding emotion to their roles, but Scott paints a deep, steely portrait
of a man haunted by misguided regret and terse yearning that keeps us at a
distance, yet lets us understand every action he takes and doesn’t take.
The two climactic shoot-outs outside of Flora Vista (where the Greer’s are
heading and the five remaining men are hiding out) give the gifted
cinematographer William Clothier scenes to show his undeniable talents with
space and lighting. Boetticher ends the film on a note of muted emotion, but
there’s no denying that the film gets everything right and we indeed feel this
movie in our stomachs and hearts. Not completely unlike the John Ford classic
My Darling Clementine, Boetticher’s film shows how sparse style and subtle,
quiet moments tend to dig much deeper than noisy gobbledygook.
Aka Seven Men from Now.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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