Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 20 November

By November 20, 2024No Comments

The Long Riders (Hill, 1980)

Still from the 1980 western The Long Riders directed by Walter Hill

Back in 1979, United Artists were in pro­duc­tion on two west­ern movies at the same time. In Montana, Michael Cimino was shoot­ing Heaven’s Gate while Georgia was stand­ing in for mid-western Missouri and Minnesota on Walter Hill’s The Long Riders.

Heaven’s Gate was an out-of-control epic that would even­tu­ally sprawl to three and a half hours and bank­rupt the stu­dio amid scath­ing reviews. The Long Riders was a much more com­mer­cial hour and forty minutes and was the first west­ern screened in com­pet­i­tion at Cannes.

So, why is Heaven’s Gate now acknow­ledged as a mas­ter­piece and The Long Riders all but forgotten?

One reas­on why The Long Riders has a dimin­ished repu­ta­tion is that it is the story of the James-Younger out­law gang – a story that had already been told more than a dozen times on screen and that would even­tu­ally inspire the great The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.

The neat trick of The Long Riders is that all the broth­ers in the story are played by real-life broth­ers: James and Stacy Keach play Jesse and Frank James; the Carradine broth­ers (David, Keith and Robert) play Cole, Jim and Bob Younger; Dennis and Randy Quaid are Ed and Clell Miller; and Christopher and (young­er) broth­er Nicholas Guest are Charley and Robert Ford respectively.

The film was the brainchild of the Keaches, ori­gin­ally planned as off-Broadway music­al of all things, and the Fords were going to be played by Beau and Jeff Bridges until Jeff signed on to make Heaven’s Gate (see above) and Beau decided that he hated the script.

The Keach broth­ers had writ­ten a draft of a script and would co-produce with the son of High Noon dir­ect­or Fred Zinnemann, Ted. Ted brought in the great action dir­ect­or Walter Hill who was hot after The Warriors became a smash hit.

The film fol­lows the Civil War vet­er­an bank and train rob­bers as they par­lay their suc­cesses into some­thing approach­ing fame (they were shiel­ded effect­ively from the law by a com­munity that thought of them as con­tem­por­ary Robin Hoods) but even­tu­ally their greed and the approach­ing Pinkertons Detective Agency put an end to their adventures.

The film is styl­ish and well acted (as you might expect) and the action set-pieces are monu­ments to stunties and squibbs. Indeed, the final show­down with the law after they find the Northfield, Minnesota, bank job has been a setup, is par­tic­u­larly bloody.

The Long Riders is also not­able for being the first film soundtrack by Ry Cooder, who would go on to col­lab­or­ate with hill sev­er­al more times. The music is spare and authen­t­ic and does a great job of set­ting the scene.

Watching the detailed ‘mak­ing of’ doc­u­ment­ary that’s part of the “Directed by Walter Hill” box set from Imprint, I learned a couple of new things. Firstly, that Cole Younger and Frank James ended their days as a vaudeville act – a shabby ver­sion of the fame and for­tune they had sought long before – and that Hill had taken on board top cos­tum­ing advice from Raul Walsh: Always let the act­ors choose their own hats.


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Where to watch The Long Riders

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa, Australia, Canada and India: Streaming on Prime Video

Ireland & UK: Digital rental

USA: Streaming on MGM+