Released: 5th January 2018 (UK)
Length: 135 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Director: Scott Cooper
Starring: Christian Bale, Rosamund Pike, Wes Studi, Ben Foster, Jesse Plemons, Rory Cochrane, Adam Beach, Q'orianka Kilcher, Stephen Lang and Scott Wilson
The Wild West setting has been a constant fixture in
Hollywood cinema, distinguished for their romanticism and often powerful themes;
nowadays though, the genre has moved into more serious territory. Contrary to
the older tales of yore, Hostiles aims for a muddier, more serious dive into
America’s western expansion, succeeding with a few caveats.
Based on a story written by Donald E. Stewart, in 1892, Joe
Blocker (Christian Bale) is a high-ranking captain in the Union Forces tasked
with taking Cheyenne Chief Yellow Hawk (Wes Studi) and his family to Montana. While
at first, he largely resents the idea of transporting the natives to their
sacred land, him and his band learn much along the rough, foreboding roads,
including the possibility of some kind of redemption. From here it’s a slow
burn narrative as they proceed across the untouched west, stumbling across
hazards along the way. The pacing is very much like 2016’s The Revenant in that
the film seeks to pull the audience into the locales, making them feel as if
they are journeying alongside the characters. For the most part it works,
though the first act feels rather routine and predictable in the way it brings
characters together. As Hostiles moves onward however it does grow more
intriguing and the connections between the main characters do build well
towards its conclusion. The moral ambiguity is one of Hostiles’ strongest
assets; the opening segments show the two opposing sides are far from blameless
and by setting out the characters in this way, the brief discussions of
morality along the journey feel appropriately poignant; it does a solid job of
summing up the drastically different motivations the white man and native
Americans had at the time.
The characters of Hostiles maintain strong ties to the film’s
time period, though some end up having more development to them than others. Christian
Bale gives a very nuanced performance; matching the archetype of the weary
captain who mostly hides his emotions from the men he commands. This is
contrasted against Rosamund Pike’s often aghast emotions as Rosalie Quaid who joins
the group early on. You get the sense of a shared trauma and guilt that
permeates the group though this doesn’t really carry over into every member of
the party. The side characters, aside from the Chief who feels very wise beyond
his years are very shallow, which does hurt the chemistry between the group. We
learn very little about the men in Joe’s company and the film rarely takes the
time to give them some interaction, making them feel rather replaceable as the
film goes on. The old west may have been an unforgiving place, but the film
could have done more to get the audience to care about each and every character
on the journey.
Hostiles won’t be winning any awards for its characterisation,
but it can stake a claim on the finer details; the sweeping landscapes of the
American Frontier look breath-taking with an assortment of forests, mountains
and riversides presented in countless wide, long reaching shots that really
make the world come alive. The camera rarely shifts from its static position,
keeping in line with the film’s slower, tentative pacing, the lighting (both
natural and from the glow of crude lamps) is superb and the action scenes that
do take place feel appropriately brutal. The soundtrack by Max Richter is often
hauntingly beautiful, relying mainly on ambient pieces that swell into more
emotional notes at several points. There’s also a terrific level of
authenticity; the dialect between the soldiers and native Americans, their
respective uniforms and the sets are all very indicative of the vast landscape
that took countless efforts to tame. The silent moments towards the end feel
especially powerful and as the film contrasts nature with manmade settlements,
you will buy into the film’s representation of real history.
While it doesn’t quite have the full substance to stand
alongside its contemporaries, Hostiles is an admirable effort to capture the quieter,
more artistic vision of the period piece. The main performances are strong, the
setting is vividly presented and that’s enough to warrant seeing it, despite a
somewhat limited release.
Rating: 3.5/5 Stars (Good)
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