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		No. 4 - 
				Lonesome Dove (1985)Motown Productions/Pangaea/Qintex 
				Entertainment, CBS
 
The Epic Film As Big As The West
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				Lonesome Dove (1985), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect Director: Simon Wincer; 
		Screenplay: William D. Wittliff; 
		from the novel by Larry McMurtry; 
		Rated TV-14
		(Parents Strongly Cautioned for children under 14)
		
		 Starring: Robert Duvall, 
		Tommy Lee Jones, Danny Glover, Diane Lane, Robert Urich, Frederic 
		Forrest, D. B. Sweeney, Ricky Schroder, Anjelica Huston, Chris Cooper, 
		Tim Scott, Glenne Headly, Barry Corbin, William Sanderson, Barry Tubb, 
		Steve Buscemi Movie Introduction: In the late 1870s, retired Texas 
		Ranger captains Gus McCrae (Duvall) and Woodrow F. Call (Jones) run a 
		livery and ranch in the small, dusty Texas border town of Lonesome Dove. 
		With their exciting Ranger days behind them, Gus focuses on relaxation 
		and poker games, while the grumpy Call remains the small enterprise's strict foreman. When long lost acquaintance Jake Spoon (Urich) 
		shows up, he plants an idea in Call’s head to take a herd of 
		cattle up north to the rich, green pastures of Montana. Gus agrees to go along, but 
		his only plan is to reconnect with 
		one-time sweetheart, Clara (Huston), now living along the way in 
		Ogallala, Nebraska. 
		McCrae and Call, along with their few ranch hands and cook, round up a 
		herd of cattle and. 
		Jake insists on bringing along the town’s 
		lone whore, the lovely Ms. Lorena (Lane). Off they head for Montana, and 
		into all the 
		perils the American West will throw before them.  
		 Defining Moment: 
		dawdling service Gus and Call take a brief 
		detour into San Antonio to find a new cook. After hiring the man, they 
		enter a saloon intent of enjoying a little whiskey. The patrons 
		ignore them. The rude bartender decides it's a good idea to disrespect the two men, suggesting that they 
		should "broom themselves off" before dragging the dust into his fine 
		establishment. The barkeep has no idea the pain he's about to encounter. In 
		ten seconds, we learn 
		all we need to know about the very able capabilities of Augustus McCrae.  (See the
		
		Full Clip YouTube) 
		Something subtle you might have missed:  
		saint macguffin As the trail drive moves along, 
		the men grow to love their new cook, the humble and wise Po Campo. They come to 
		him for conversation and sometimes advice. The pleasant man can even 
		tell your future if you spit into the wagon.  He carves a little figurine 
		of a young girl and offers it the Josh Deets, the drive's trail scout. Deets gladly accepts the trinket. He asks who the carving represents, 
		and Po replies, "Um... a little saint, to keep you safe on your journey." Day 
		after day the journey gets harder and harder. More and more Deets 
		clutches the idol for comfort.
		 In a critical moment, McCrae, 
		Call and Deets encounter a band of starving natives. When a shot is 
		fired, the band flees in all directions, leaving a small baby on a 
		blanket. The gentle Deets ascends his position on the knoll and comforts the crying child. 
		He gives up his good luck 
		charm for the baby to play with. 
		 The "macGuffin of protection" 
		is a plot device sometimes used by filmmakers to foreshadow impending 
		danger or doom. As long as the character possesses the macguffin, they 
		are safe. When they give it up, they are in danger. This is the case 
		with Po Campo's little saint.        Memorable Quotes: 
		 "Well the 
		first man comes along that can read Latin is welcome to rob us, far as 
		I'm concerned. I'd like a chance to shoot at an educated man once in my 
		life." – Gus McCrae "Well, hell, 
		boys. I'd damn sight rather be hung by my friends than by a bunch o' 
		damn strangers. Well, adios, boys. Hope you won't hold it against me. 
		Never meant no harm." - Jake Spoon "I hate rude 
		behavior in a man. I won't tolerate it." – Woodrow F. Call Dad's Review: There are so 
		many things about Lonesome Dove that resonate with me and my Texas 
		roots. Cattle. Cowboys. Dust. This CBS mini-series is now 
		noted as a high point, career-wise, for Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee 
		Jones. This epic film is just as small and intimate, as it is big and 
		expansive. The cowboys move along the trail North, one heartbreak after 
		another; a crucible as diverse as the expanse from hot, dry Texas to frozen, mountainous Montana. 
		 Enough cannot 
		be said about Duvall's performance as Augustus McCrae. The actor himself refers to 
		it as his favorite role. That is saying something for a man who has been 
		in 85 films (and still counting) including: 
		True 
		Grit (1969), 
		The Godfather (1972),
		Tender Mercies (1983) and
		Deep Impact (1998). Duvall's films pepper Dad's Movie Lists. 
		He portrays Gus as a man who has done a lot in 
		his lifetime. He has no desire to prove anything to anybody. He 
		has learned to treasure the simple things. Not much gets him upset. He has a calming 
		effect on the people around him. He's warm and funny. However, he’s still a 
		Texas Ranger, and when it's time to buck up, he shakes off the dust and 
		springs into action, without thought or hesitation. The segment where he pursues the bandits who have kidnapped Lorena 
		is unforgettable. He will deal 
		with her captors swiftly and efficiently.  He nails the famous McMurtry character 
		perfectly.  I 
		don't know if there is a little bit of Gus in all of us, but there is a 
		whole lot of Gus in me. Perhaps Gus resonates so much because he reminds me of my grandfather, Charles Dean Straley 
		(picture left with his wife's dog, Queenie). 
		Folks referred to him Charley, but us kids all called him "Daddy Straley". 
		He spent his 
		entire life on a Texas ranch raising crops, cattle and three children. Daddy Straley had 
		a little twinkle in his eye and a warm sense of humor. He was eager to 
		listen and valued your opinion. He'd take my hand and we'd mosey the 
		quarter-mile walk down to the "lot" (a barn and pens) to 
		check on the expecting heifers. He'd vanish for a couple of minutes, to sneak a shot of whiskey, 
		then he'd sit on a bale of hay and enjoy a smoke on his pipe. I would climb the pipe fence to sit on the 
		top bar and take in his pleasant company. I knew it was an honor 
		to be around him. Those moments are my favorite memories. Every person who knew him always conveyed 
		how much they respected him. All the grandkids loved the man... I worshipped 
		him. When he died in 1978, I was 16, and on that day, I grew up.  
		 Regarding 
		Lonesome Dove’s plot, it is a rich set of simultaneous stories moving 
		along, at times intersecting. Gus and Call have their hands full 
		pushing the herd North. Jake Spoon leaves the herd and reluctantly falls in with a 
		gang of murderous horse thieves. Sheriff July Johnson sets out to 
		find his wife, a woman searching for her outlaw ex-husband rumored to be in 
		Ogallala. When a 
		merciless Mexican bandit named Blue Duck, kidnaps Lorena, Gus has to leave the herd to find her. Call keeps the herd heading 
		ever northward.  The pure 
		genius of this six hour mini-series is that often things don’t happen 
		the way you expect, just like life. Not every story has a happy ending. The 
		perils of the American West were real. People died - good people. Some made bad choices. 
		Some chased things they knew didn't make sense. And sometimes, the most unlikely of folks rose up and 
		surprised you. Of all 
		the Western films I have seen, and reviewed, and contemplated, I personally 
		think this is the greatest ever made. For that, I raise my 
		glass, to Gus, to Call, to Daddy Straley, and to the "sunny slopes of long ago".       
				Onto No. 5a... The Brotherhood of 
				the Circlet             |