Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Red Rock West (1993) - Review

Red Rock West is a movie that could never be made again in the 2020s, for better or for worse. The movie stars Nicolas Cage as a drifter, Michael, who has travelled near a rural Wyoming town to interview for work. After a string of setbacks, Michael finds himself in a small-time conspiracy when his identity is mistaken with that of a hired killer (Dennis Hopper) and is tasked with killing the local bar owner’s (J.T. Walsh) wife (Lara Flynn Boyle).


This role of a drifter is one that Nic Cage has inhabited quite often throughout his career (give examples from reviews), and it is a role in which he often succeeds. The backstory can evolve as the story needs it, and anything else can fall away. Michael’s backstory evolves at each of the story beats: he has a disability that prevents him from getting a job, then the injury is explained as he relates to other characters, and there is a lingering tension between doing the right thing and succumbing to easy ways to access security.

Another strength of Red Rock West is its incredibly small cast. The number of people on screen at any time is not only small, but the cast list is also small. Doing a quick check over the credits, the total cast is about twenty people. This not only allows for the small town feel to be conveyed appropriately, but it also allows for the story to breathe through its characters; the characters that are present are given the permission to go beyond just advancing the story and inhabit the world for the short 90 minutes. No one outplays each other, even with veteran actors like Hopper rounding out the cast

As stated above, Red Rock West could not be made again. The chase for box office success has made it so that those which appeal to the broadest audience, something that cannot be said of this movie. That is not to say that it is a bad movie. On the contrary, Red Rock West shines brightly today because it is different than what we have become adjusted to. This movie will remain one of my favorite Nic Cage movies because of how simple it tries to be and succeeds to a great degree.

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