Open Range
Robert Duvall Actor , Kevin Costner Actor , Annette Bening Actor , Michael Gambon Actor , Michael Jeter Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Questionable for Children,Western Violence
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Open Range
Theatrical Release Date: 2003 08 15 (USA)
UPC: 786936226379
Studio: Walt Disney Video
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Questionable for Children, Western Violence]
Summary: Kevin Costner stars in and directs the Western Open Range. Robert Duvall stars as Boss Spearman, a rugged old-timer who free-grazes cattle. He and Charley Waite (Costner) have been partners for ten years. As the film opens in the 1880s, the pair and their employees -- the beefy, rugged, likable Mose (Abraham Benrubi) and the impetuous Mexican teenager Buttons (Diego Luna) -- are driving cattle across the West. Mose is attacked and thrown in jail during a visit to a town. The local cattle rancher Baxter (Michael Gambon) wants the free grazers off his land and warns Charley and Boss when they retrieve Mose that they have until the next day to be out of the area. Boss decides to fight back, especially after Baxter's men do harm to the foursome. Charley confesses his past as a killer during the Civil War and strikes up a tentative romance with Sue Barlow -- the sister of the town doctor. The film's centerpiece is an extended gunfight between the duo (with some assistance from sympathetic townsfolk) and Baxter's hired gunmen. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
Category: Western
Features:
ccDisc One: Open Range feature film
Audio commentary with Kevin Costner
Disc Two:
"America's Open Range"
"Beyond Open Range" director's journal
Deleted scenes with optional commentary by Kevin Costner
"Storyboard: Open Range"
Music video montage
Open Range
Format: DVD
Release Date: 01/20/2004
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS Digital Theater Systems
Runtime: 139 Minutes
Sides: 2
Number of Discs: 2
Language(s) French,English
Subtitles: Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Side #1 --
1. Opening Credits/A Rainy Campsite [9:49]
2. Mose Is Sent to Town [6:48]
3. Searching for Mose [7:15]
4. Doc Barlow's [9:55]
5. A Midnight Raid [13:33]
6. Tending to Button [5:00]
7. A Storm Is Brewin' [2:26]
8. A Warm Cup of Tea [6:55]
9. Showdown at the Saloon [9:06]
10. A Visit With the Sheriff [7:13]
11. Charley and Sue [2:48]
12. The Town Prepares [9:23]
13. Charley Lays Out His Plan [5:00]
14. The Gunfight Begins [2:13]
15. The Town Helps Out [2:59]
16. Charley Asks to See Sue [9:40]
17. A Proposal [11:06]
18. End Credits [6:14]
Perry Seibert
Bookended by somewhat flawed first and third acts, Kevin Costner's Open Range has a strong second act that makes it quite worthwhile. This simple tale about morality and revenge could easily have been filmed in the early '50s with John Wayne in the Costner part and Walter Brennan in the Boss Spearman role, although one is hard pressed to think anyone could be better than Robert Duvall, who manages to find the right mix -- part real person, part mythic evocation of the West -- to give this film the weight Costner is aiming for much of the time. The first 30 minutes of the film -- when the men are alone with the expansive land -- attempts to bring the viewer into the languid pace associated with Westerns, but occasionally blurs the line between leisurely and dull. Once they make their way into town, however, the film has a confidence that should keep any viewer involved. Costner the director displays talent throughout the film, although it wavers in some instances. The climactic gunfight, a very long sequence full of action, frightening stillness, tension, and occasional humor is brilliantly handled. The audience can see where everybody is and why people shoot when and where they do. At the same time, however, there is a scary, disorganized feeling in the speed of the shooting and in the camera angles that gives the audience the same sense of fear that the combatants are experiencing. The violence is real and visceral without being exploitive. Sadly, the flat-footed resolution of the love story between Costner and Annette Bening ends the film with a whimper rather than a bang. There are three scenes between the couple -- which is certainly one and probably two too many. But that misstep in the final ten minutes does not take away from the achievement that is the meat of Open Range. Costner has made a good film by displaying his knowledge of Westerns and his appreciation for Robert Duvall. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Kevin Costner
Director
Kevin Costner
Producer
Armyan Bernstein
Executive Producer
Jake Eberts
Producer
Michael Kamen
Composer (Music Score)
David Valdes
Producer
Craig Storper
Executive Producer
Craig Storper
Screenwriter
Robert Duvall
Actor
Kevin Costner
Actor
Annette Bening
Actor
Michael Gambon
Actor
Michael Jeter
Actor
Diego Luna
Actor
James Russo
Actor
Abraham Benrubi
Actor
Dean McDermott
Actor
Kim Coates
Actor
Country: USA

