Sure Rob Banks-As Willie Sutton Said-“That Is Where The
Money Is” Chris Pine And Jeff Bridges “Hell Or High Water” (2016)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Seth Garth
Hell and High Water, starring Chris Pine, Jeff Bridges,
Ben Foster, 2016
I was more than happy to take this assignment from Greg
Green our site manager and a guy who has proven to be a great editor over time.
I am happy because I always am ready, willing and able to review a Jeff Bridge’s
film ever since I first saw him way back when in The Last Picture Show and have wondered ever since why, until Crazy Hearts several years ago, he had
not won an Oscar for his many great performances. I am happy also because any
film that starts with a Townes Van Zandt song (Dollar Bill Blues) and a slew of other cowboy-etched efforts will
immediately draw my attention. To add another point I am always happy to review
a modern cowboy film where the actors, or one actor Chris Pine, who plays somber
brother Toby to Ben Foster’s wild boy Tanner, remind me of the late Sam Shepard
and his stoic routines playing a man of the West.
But most importantly for this film Hell and High Water I have been given an opportunity to answer back
to young and up and coming film reviewer Sarah LeMoyne about something she
wrote about my attitude toward snitches in her review of 1988’s Married To The Mob. There Sarah
castigated me, and by implication half the older male writers at this
publication because, come hell or high water, we are since corner boy days
very, very squeamish about finks, you know snitches in that case by that role
of one ex-wife of a mob hit man to the FBI. As Sarah said in the interest of
love that woman had every right to snitch. I went crazy when she mentioned to her
take when she asked my opinion. Now I get a real rebuttal since I am sure that
she would not want anybody to snitch to the Texas Rangers on sexy and cowboy
handsome Toby who after all was not doing it for the mob, just a job, but for
his sons. Sarah can stew in her juices on that one until she replies in some
future review she writes-if she gets one.
But on to the real deal, on to the “skinny” as Sam Lowell
who backs me up 100% on this snitch business. Toby and Tanner, one thoughtful
the other a wild boy, brothers are robbing banks to right some wrongs to their family
but also as just mentioned to ensure that Toby’s sons don’t have to grow up and
be dirt poor like he had grown up in rural Texas. Why banks. Well as the title
to this review points out in regard to a classic statement on the matter by the
famous, or infamous, bank robber when asked- “that is where the money is.” That
was Toby’s plan in any case. You might ask why banks in this day in age but it
seems down in prairie Texas and maybe plenty of other places as well the branches
of major banks are not up to snuff necessarily on the latest security technology.
So the boys play out the old Wild West banking robberies scenario to further
Toby’s plan for his sons. Tanner, a jailbird is just along for the adventure,
for the blood sport, for kicks and because Toby is his brother.
Come hell or high water though, using that phrase again
in a different context, the law, here the well-known Texas Rangers, headed by a
pair of agents, one the almost retiree Marcus Hamilton, played by versatile
Jeff Bridges, are on the case. The wily old Marcus has the case half figured
out before noon that these robberies were planned and were aimed at a
particular banking system. All they had to do was wait it on at one of the
branches and the game would be over. Old Marcus proved to be right except
before the end his partner was killed by the warrior king Tanner in a shoot-out
scene very reminiscent of the final showdown between the character played by
Humphrey Bogart in High Sierra and
the coppers also after a failed robbery with deaths involved. Well Tanner was doomed
anyway. Toby is another story since he actually was able to succeed in his plan-in
the short run. See Marcus figured him in on the caper as well but couldn’t
quite get anybody else to connect the dots. He and Toby have a final verbal
confrontation before the curtain closes leaving everybody to wonder what will
happen next. Making me try to get Sarah LeMoyne to squirm a little over whether
she would turn Toby in, snitch on the guy. For now that’s it.
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