Movie Review: Struggling Siblings reconnect, or try to — “Scrap”

Thirtyish Beth smiles and gives her five-year-old daughter a squeeze.

“Gremlin, you know I will always take care of you.”

As we’ve heard Beth lie like she breathes, we doubt that, even if the little girl she named Barbara but calls “Birdy” doesn’t.

As we’ve seen Beth ditch her kid for weeks with her brother and his wife, not telling them she was laid off from her job, lost her apartment and has been living in her VW Tiguan on the unwelcoming streets of Beverly Hills, we know all about Beth’s denial.

A single mom who IDs calls from her ex baby daddy “DO NOT ANSWER,” unemployed and compulsively shopping online, keeping up appearances at the kid’s private school where tuition is overdue, showering and dressing in public toilets for job interviews, we can appreciate Beth’s juggling and struggling and still have zero confidence that she has the wherewithal to keep all these balls in the air.

Vivian Kerr stars as Beth, a woman who can’t help but feel like “Scrap” in the slight but engaging indie dramedy she wrote and directed, based on a short film Kerr wrote and starred in a few years back

It’s a character study of two characters — Beth and her popular novelist and ever-enabling older brother (Anthony Rapp) — and a downbeat look at a downward spiral that could hit anybody living paycheck to paycheck, no matter how white collar their career may seem.

Kerr’s Beth is scrappy, proud and yet easy to judge. Her brother’s wife (Lana Parilla) sees how much Ben gave up to raise her after their parents died, and mutters “boundaries” at every boundary BEth crosses and every imposition Beth carelessly tosses their way.

Birdy (Julianna Layne) is staying with them while Beth is on “a business trip” to Atlanta, a trip that’s a lie which they’re none the wiser about despite Beth’s repeated “it ran long” excuses. When Beth “gets back” she moves in, as well.

Ben, trying to find the stamina to finish off his best-selling “Oracle” fantasy series when he’d rather be “another white guy” publishing another Billie Holiday biography, and struggling to conceive with lawyer-wife Stacey, has his suspicions about Beth. He knows her better than anybody, after all.

But he’s seen worse, and if he can’t make her own-up to her responsibilities and level with him today, maybe tomorrow will be different.

“Scrap,” a film festival darling, features good, little-heralded actors playing “types” covering a lot of familiar and predictable ground. The guilt-stricken ex (Brad Schmidt), the cute skating rink manager (Khleo Thomas) suggesting openings at “the outlet mall” to the unemployed “public releations professional,” the overly-made-up LA job interviewer, the vapid former colleague all have their place and arrive at almost pre-ordained moments.

A nice Angelino asks homeless Beth “Are you all right?” So a cranky home owner is sure to follow and call the police on her for squatting (literally) in his subdivision.

But formulaic limitations aside, Kerr and Rapp really click as siblings who know which buttons to push and which scenic locations will trigger flashbacks. Parilla brings a compassion to the stressed-as-it-is sister-in-law that’s heartening to see.

And Kerr carries her film with an alternately empathetic and irritating pluck that makes you root for her and her “story,” even if she’s merely restating the tried, the true and the obvious for a new generation.

Rating: unrated, profanity

Cast: Vivian Kerr, Anthony Rapp, Khleo Thomas, Brad Schmidt and Lana Parilla

Credits: Scripted and directed by Vivian Kerr. A Rue Dangeau release on Apple or iTunes.

Running time: 1:45

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Netflixable? Parole violators don’t stand a chance against “Officer Black Belt”

Absurd on its surface and dark hearted to say the least, “Officer Black Belt” is a violent thriller that flirts with being a Korean action comedy.

If you can get by the murderers, rapists and many child molesters brought to rough (almost) justice in between the entertaining brawls and “cool” moments, this might have lived up to it comical title and set-up.

Model-turned-actor Kim Woo-bin plays Lee Jung-do, a young adrenalin junky who throws himself into judo, taekwondo and kendo when he isn’t making deliveries for his dad’s chicken restaurant and hanging with his gaming and gadget obsessed nerd pals — Moisture, Earthworm and Screenwriter.

No, lady friends don’t fit into their picture.

His voiced-over credo about life choices is “Is it something I’ll have fun doing?”

He has fun intervening when a body armored but unarmed “martial arts officer” for the parole department is nearly killed by an ankle-braceleted ex-con. That’s how that department and Director Kim (Lee Hae-Young) come to recruit him.

Can he fill in while that injured parole officer is recovering? No police training, no department vetting. His assorted black belts are all the qualification he needs to be put on the street rounding up miscreants who are violating their parole.

He might be warned “He’s got a knife” about this convicted killer or child rapist. Lee’s quick to quip “Don’t you worry about that,” in Korean with English subtitles.

The idea is that the parole dept. wants to round up violators in non-violent, or at least non-lethal ways.

There are moments of “solid police work” and scenes where we see a seemingly overly-compassionate system (The “agenda” of the script?) at work as Director Kim de-escalates confrontations that Lee Jong-do would rather finish with a foot to the crotch.

But mainly this is a seriously violent, semi-serious treatment of assorted serious subjects.

A “tell” comes early on, when a violent parolee is interrupted, mid-rape, and beaten into submission. He is cuffed…and charged with “resisting” an officer and breaking parole. The woman he was RAPING? The screenwriter forgets all about her, as do the parole officers.

Lee Jung-do comes to see himself as a defender of children as he battles bigger and bigger offenders (Kim Sung Kyun plays the most hulking of these) in bigger and bigger mobs.

Grim, organized child sex conspiracies are detected, but the nerd trio will play a part in Officer Black Belt’s rise to the challenge.

Kim Woo-bin is a charismatic lead and Kim Sung Kyun an equally charismatic foe. But the clashing tones and slipshod plotting between the fights does Jason Kim’s thriller in. A couple of early laughs and a few brutally “cool” brawls are all there is to recommend it.

Rating: TV-MA, violence, child sexual assault subject matter

Cast: Kim Woo-bin, Kim Sung Kyun and Lee Hae Young

Credits: Scripted and directed by Kim Joo-hwan (Jason Kim). A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:48

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Movie Preview: K-horror about a transplant that goes supernaturally, horrifically wrong — “Devils Stay”

Dad knows something’s wrong. He’s “hearing” from his dead daughter.

And is she “dead,” after all? I mean, he did the heart transplant and all. Where did her heart end up?

Dec. 6.

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Movie Review: Colombian Road Warriors smuggle gas, and more — “Pimpinero: Blood and Oil”

It begins in a “Road Warrior” hellscape, a desert borderland where gasoline is smuggled in a high stakes game of chicken with the authorities of two countries added to the danger of carelessly transporting an explosively flammable substance.

We meet a “Fast and Furious” gang (“family”) driving ancients Detroit beaters, pickups and motorbikes undertaking this deadly enterprise.

Set on the 2012 Colombian/Venezuelan border, “Pimpinero: Blood and Oil” opens with great promise and tasty action picture possibilities before running out of gas in the middle acts as it shifts point of view and stumbles towards the even deadlier prospects of its finale.

Colombian director and co-writer Andrés Baiz was seriously onto something right up to the moment he wasn’t. “Pimpinero,” which takes its title from the Latin drum the various characters are “dancing” to in this criminal conspiracy thriller, is less than the sum of its possibilities.

The Estrada brothers — Moises, Ulises and Juan (Juanes, Alberto Guerra and Alejandro Speitzer) — lead a “clan” of smugglers taking advantage of the world’s cheapest gas prices (in Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela) by hauling fuel in jerry cans and liter bottles through the “trails” across the most desolate corner of the border. Gas is 60 times higher in the cartel-crushed Colombian economy, and even a soft drink bottle’s worth has profit in it.

They make their hauls in assorted ’70s and ’80s Yank Tanks — an aged Impala, a rusting “Starsky & Hutch” vintage Torino, pickups.

But their rival Don Carmelo (David Noreña) plays dirty. And when they match his sabotage with a ratting-out of their own, it just gets people killed. The Estrada gang breaks up, sells-out or gives up the ghost.

Except for handsome Juan. He’s got a beautiful, gas-vending girlfriend (Laura Osma) with dreams of sex “on the beach,” and not just the cocktail version. Diana talks him into “one or two last runs” (in Spanish, or dubbed into English). As she is the daughter of some infamous character named “El Loco,” of course she knows how to drive. And shoot.

Chavez closes the border, and with Venezuelan and Colombian military and police crawling over the place, the game turns even more dangerous. There are debts to be paid, deals to be made and compromises that won’t sit well with hotheaded Juan.

He will be tested, as will Diana. Blood ties, old family connections, narrow escapes and disheartening captures clutter up the middle acts as the film’s plot shifts, different characters take the lead and there’s less about this “world” and more about the generic “What is the cinema most obsessed about smuggling now?”

The film’s introductory scenes promise chases and stunts and violence that are rarely served up in the movie to follow. We’re immersed in a black market of illicit gas, government collusion, human trafficking and cockfighting where “family” is supposed to matter, but doesn’t.

Baiz kind of loses his way when he makes this less about the characters he’s spent time making us invest in and more about plot twists that fall flat.

Lawless borderlands have been a great setting for fiction since storytelling began, and plenty of classic cinema uses this as its milieu, from “The Treasure of Sierra Madre” to assorted Asian and Southeast Asian free-for-alls to the “Mad Max” movies. The world set up in “Pimpinero” begs to be explored.

That was the movie I found myself wanting to see, tossing a “Fast and Furious” crew into lawless country run by smugglers, law enforcement, smuggler-robbing “pirates” (on bikes) and the like. Anything less was sure to disappoint, after the rowdy opening scenes. And “anything less” was what Baiz, unfortunately, is hellbent on delivering.

Rating: R, violence, sex, nudity, profanity

Cast: Alejandro Speitzer, Laura Osma, Alberto Guerra, Juanes, Norberto Rivera and
David Noreña

Credits: Directed by Andrés Baiz, scripted by
Maria Camila Arias and Andrés Baiz. An MGM/Amazon release on Prime.

Running time: 2:02

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Movie Preview: Jackie Chan gets mixed up in sword and scorcery and…archaelogy — “A Legend”

A period piece with a modern scientist mixed up in the lessons the past has to teach the present.

Stanley Tong directed this one.

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Movie Review: Spain’s Oscar hopes ride on “Saturn Return (Segundo Premio)” a bio pic of the indie band Los Planetas

You don’t have to know the history and love the music of Spanish indie rock icons Los Planetas (“The Planets”) to connect with the new bio-pic about these ’90s fixtures of Spanish “alternative rock.” But it helps.

“Saturn Return” is Spain’s official contender for Best International Feature at the 97th Academy Awards.

Co-directors Isaki Lacuesta and Pol Rodríguez, working from a script by Lacuesta and Fernando Navarro, set out to film the “myth” and “lore” of the band, making their songs their “biography.”

That is how we “interpret” Fleetwood Mac. Why not this Spanish five-piece?

As more than one character, narrating in voice over, relates a scene or sequence of events, and either admits “This isn’t what happened” (in Spanish with English subtitles) or contradicts what the unreliable narrator before him or her just said, that’s problematic from a “just the facts” point of view.

But the story and songs of a guitars-and-keyboards band from Granada, whose singer-songwriter is obssesed with Granada’s native son, the doomed, patriotic poet and playwright Federico García Lorca, kind of lends itself to this mythic treatment, “facts” be damned.

So try not to be bothered by the filmmakers’ obscurant approach — withholding the names of ANY character for over 50 minutes, not naming most of the others. We simply watch and listen to “The Singer” (Daniel Ibáñez of “Terminator: Dark Fate”) compose, narrate and bicker with his fellow guitarist (first-time actor Cristalini) and pick up on the love triangle/”thruple” that original bassist May (Stéphanie Magnin) quit the band to escape.

Or was it their descent into drugs that bugged her more?

The story picks up as that breakup is underway, with May and a drummer departing just as Los Planetas are blowing up — too cool to lip-sync for an insipid Spanish pop music show, seemingly too narcissistic and self-destructive to ever really get along.

They drop Joy Division and “The Velvets” (Velvet Underground) as their inspirations and guiding lights. The singer dreams of recording in New York, and slow-walks their latest LP — “A Week Inside the Motor of a Bus” (Una Semana en el Motor de un Autobus) — almost as an act of protest against their skinflint record company.

Musically and temperamentally, they’re kind of Oasis meets REM with a hint of Weezer and Blink-182.

It takes a bluff, hard-drinking, no-nonsense “futuristic flamenco” drummer (Mafo) to get these mofos on task.

“Typical Granadinos,” May shrugs, every time she hears from the singer, every time she narrates their descent into drugs and drug-fueled violence.

The situations are “indie rock” band-on-the-rise/quarreling-on-tour cliches. We can’t trust what we hear in the narration, and can’t trust what we see — as one character gets his throat slashed, but that’s not his “real” injury. And while the characters are more than “types,” the filmmaking choices made here tend to reduce them to that.

It’s not the most approachable film of this tried-and-true genre, and not all the “artistic” touches benefit the script, even if the players are good enough to create vivid characters in heroin-fueled existential crises lacking names or relationships outside of the band.

But music video cinematographer Takuro Takeuchi makes it all lurid and streetwise, from the streets of Granada to the just-as-mean streets of Manhattan.

And for all the navel gazing and composing, they don’t dare leave out that one moment when creative lightning strikes in the studio. Because nobody’s too good to duck their “Bohemian Rhapsody” moment, here devoted to “Segundo Premio” (“Second Place”) off that New York-recorded third album with a bus engine in the title.

That’s the Spanish title of the film. “Saturn Return” is, I guess, a play on a Spanish “learn your planets” song. Cute. But would you know that if you didn’t know Los Planetas and the culture that created and contributed them to the world music of the ’90s and beyond?

This one has merits, but it’s damned tough to go into without doing a little homework. Or a lot.

Rating: unrated, violence, sex, nudity

Cast: Daniel Ibáñez, Cristalini, Stéphanie Magnin, Mafo, Chesco Ruiz, Daniel Molina,

Credits: Directed by Isaki Lacuesta and Pol Rodríguez, scripted by Isaki Lacuesta and Fernando Navarro. An Outsider Pictures release.

Running time: 1:49

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Movie Preview: Obsessed with hunting “sexual predators” — But who are the “Filthy Animals” here?

A favorite obsession of the wingnut right gets its own dark comedy about “punishing” predators, and makes us wonder what sort of person carries around such an obsession.

Two “outlaws/predators” set out to hunt accused “predators” on Christmas Eve.

Raymond T. Barry is the lone “name” in the cast of this first film by a fellow who figures his name belongs above the title even though it’s his first feature film.

Dec. 13.

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BOX OFFICE: “Moana 2” breaks records, “Black Friday” is one for the books

“Moana 2” opened Wednesday, and a fall that has been STARVED for animated family film fare (save for the limping-along “Wild Robot”) was finally sated over the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

It earned over $221 million over the five day “weekend,” according to Box Office Mojo.

The Polynesian epic Disney blockbuster sold $57 million in tickets Wed., another $28 million Thursday and almost $55 million on Friday alone. The three day weekend tally was $135 million.

That won’t tsunami “Wicked” out of the picture. “Part 1” of the filmed version of this wildly popular musical opened with $112 million over three days LAST weekend, and added another $32 million Friday. It will clear the $100 million mark over the Wed-Sunday period, $80 million just for the weekend alone.

“Gladiator II” completes the trifecta of films making this a record-setting Black Friday at the box office. It opened at $55, and will add another $45 million over five days by Sunday night. It may not dominate “good movies to see” conversations, but the Paramount sequel cleared the $80 million mark Thursday, added another $12.4 million and will be well on its way towards $200 million — having cleared $111 million mark by Sunday (a $30 million three day weekend).

I thought everybody was broke?

By the way, that makes “Gladiator II” the biggest hit on Denzel Washington’s Oscar-bedecked resume.

“Red One” is still in theaters, still pulling in a healthy $13 million and change. It won’t earn back its budget before heading to streaming, but the bleeding isn’t a “bleed out” that it might have been.

“Best Christmas Pageant Ever” is plugging along, on a pace to clear the $30 million mark sometime Saturday and hold its thin grasp in the Top Five with a $3. 275 million or so weekend.

The clumsily-titled-and-executed “Bonheoffer: Pastor. Spy. Assassin” will take sixth place for the weekend — $2.4 million. It is trending towards a mid-teens take, all in, by the time it finishes its run.

“Venom: The Last Dance” surrendered a lot of its screens and is barely paying the electric bill at its remaining cinemas as it looks to finish out of the top five and finish its run having sold $140 million+ in tickets. That’s all found money, Sony, as this franchise was never all that.

The bottom half of the top ten is not carrying its weight at all. “A Real Pain” is straining to reach the $10 million mark, the equally-hyped sex worker drama “Anora” is running on fumes as it passes $12 million, and “Small Things Like These”the best grownup film in the top ten and starring an Oscar winner (Cillian Murphy), is barely registering.

Let the people with small children pack “Moana 2,” “Small Things,” “Heretic” and “A Real Pain” are everybody else’s best bets this weekend.

“Heretic” has almost — $179K short — cleared the $27 million mark by adding another $1 million this weekend (3 days, not five).

“The Wild Robot” will finish its run shortly and will have earned less than $150 million in the U.S. This is why studios make sequels, kids. Title/brand recognition is about as much attention as most people pay to movie as they’re released. It took this very entertaining children’s film two and a half months to earn less than “Moana 2” earned in three days.

It stands at $142 million in what should be its last weekend in the top ten.

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Classic Film Review: Carney, Tomlin, Killings and a Missing Cat — “The Late Show” (1977)

The golden age of film noir — cynical, sinister and shadowy thrillers about crime and the unchanging nature of human criminality — was the 1940s and ’50s, when black and white cinema still ruled.

The genre never really went away, but it had an Eastmancolor revival in the ’70s as Robert Altman (“The Long Goodbye”), Roman Polanski (“Chinatown”), Mike Hodges (“Get Carter”), Lumet, Penn and Pakula tried their hands at “hard boiled.”

It’s been a writer’s genre from the start, with screenwriter/directors like John Huston adapting pulp novels by Dashiell Hammet and Raymond Chandler, or imitating their style in original scripts, taking care to preserve the flinty characters, seedy settings and quotable, tough-guy/tougher-gal dialogue.

One of the great screenwriters of his era — the Oscar-winning writer and sometimes writer-director Robert Benton — served up “hard boiled” characters, settings and dialogue all well past their expiration date in “The Late Show,” a picture that marked a “comeback” for aged TV star Art Carney of “The Honeymooners,” and a big screen star-making turn for comedienne turned character player (“Nashville”) Lily Tomlin.

It’s a brisk, dark and immensely quotable L.A. private eye yarn about murders, missing stamps, a femme fatale and the downmarket side of showbiz inhabited by aged has-beens and younger never-will-be’s.

Benton, who scripted “Bonnie and Clye,” the Western “Bad Company,” the ’70s screwball “What’s Up, Doc?”, who won Oscars for “Kramer vs. Kramer” and “Places in the Heart,” would pull off a similar “AARP noir” pic with 1998’s “Twilight.”

The plot is elaborate and willfully convoluted. And the dialogue? Strictly hard-you-know-what.

“I’m sorry, doll. What I never told you is this is the hardest goddamn way in the world to make a buck.”

The chatter passes by in a rush, with characters talking over each other here and there. Robert Altman produced the picture, and members of his repertory company (Tomlin, Bob Considine and Howard Duff) show up. It’s Benton’s film, but it’s no insult to label its light, often goofy tone, pacing and quirky characters “Altmanesque.”

An old pal (Duff) stumbles into the room aged loner Ira Wells (Carney) rents from a little old widow with a hint of dementia. That old pal is bleeding from a gunshot wound Ira instantly IDs as “a .45.” Landlady Mrs. Schmidt (Ruth Nelson) calls the police and asks for an ambulance without really registering what’s happened. Later shoot-outs in front of and into her house don’t phase her either.

Ira? “You’re dyin’, Harry. Who did this to ya?”

Similarly sleezy Charlie (Bill Macy of “My Favorite Year” and TV’s “Maude”) buttonholes Ira at Harry’s funeral. Today of all days he wants Ira to find this dizzy ex-actress’s (Tomlin) kidnapped cat.

Margo talks. A lot. And very fast. Reminding her to “cut to the chase” doesn’t always help.

“This little kitty is just a little honey bun. Give this little cat a break!

Yeah, the missing cat’s related to what Harry was mixed up in — stolen goods, guns, blackmail. Ira’s on the job, “$25 a day, plus expenses.” Because Ira’s got a mission.

“Whoever it was who killed Harry is going to be goddamned sorry.”

Asking around and getting Charlie — a Hollywood hustler with a dozen “talent” related businesses he passes off as legit — to do the same points Ira at a stolen goods handling loan shark named Birdwell (Eugene Roche), Birdwell’s “muscle” (Considine) and Birdwell’s young, straying sexpot wife (Joanna Cassidy of “Blade Runner,” “Under Fire” and TV’s “Six Feet Under”).

“The cops” are but a distant, empty threat lying just outside the machinations of this crowd. Ira takes punches and mentions “lead” he’s still carrying around from some dame’s pistol from back in the ’50s. He’s seen it all and maybe he’s gotten wise in the process, or maybe not. His prices were already way out of date. He’s wearing a baggy, worn-out suit, taking notes and packing a revolver. He’s a walking anachoronism.

“Back in the ’40s, this town was crawlin’ with dollies like you. Good-lookin’ coquettes tryin’ their damnedest to act tough as hell. I got news for you — they did it better back then. This town doesn’t change – they just push the names around.”

Dizzy Margo runs some sort of “talent” business in her comically-overdecorated apartment and is nobody’s idea of “tough at hell.” But she’s rough around the edges. And yeah, she can raise cash the old fashioned (in the ’70s) way, and talk you to death telling you how.

“You know what I had to go through to hassle up this dough? I laid off four ounces of pure red Colombian for $15 an ounce. I mean, it’s disgusting. Some freak over on Pico thinks I’m Santa Claus, I swear to God. $15 an ounce… $15 an ounce. This grass was so great, I can’t tell you. There was so much resin in it, it made your lips stick together.”

There’s a late night car chase that’s thrilling and laugh-out-loud funny, and not just because it’s a ’68 Toyota Corona chasing a beater of a ’64 Dodge van.

Benton’s glory years were well underday, his Oscars just a couple of years off. But he takes pains to make the stakes life-and-death and the plot of this parody plausible, if kind of laughable, with or without the rat-a-tat dialogue.

The beatings are kind of convincing, the shoot-outs as on-and-off target as you’d expect. And through it all, the unlikeliest “buddies” of the buddy picture era shine, setting off grousing, grumbling comic sparks every time they connect.

It was Ms. “Evolved” vs. Mr. “Unevolved,” a running theme through Tomlin’s comedy over the decades. But here, evolution doesn’t stand a chance against the grumpy grandpa patriarchy.

“That’s just what this town has been waiting for. A broken-down old private eye with a bum leg and a hearing aid, and a fruitcake like you.”

star

Rating: PG, violence, profanity

Cast: Art Carney, Lily Tomlin, Bill Macy, Joanna Cassidy, and Howard Duff.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Robert Benton, scripted by A Warner Bros. release on Tubi.

Running time: 1:33

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Movie Review: An Old West Sheriff sees Dead People — “Ghosts of Red Ridge”

“Ghosts of Red Ridge” is a low-budget Western that tries to be a ghost story. It’s not anything to write home about in either genre.

There’s some nice lived-in detail in the locations, the dusty, dirty costumes and almost-colorful characters. But that plot. Those characters.

Owen Williams stars as the sheriff of Red Ridge, a guy so haunted by the violence of the place and his job that he starts seeing the dark-eyed dead.

This little piece of Texas (a long-standing movie set in Arizona) popped up as a mining town, but the precious metals rush was a bust. Even waiting for the railroad to come through isn’t enough to keep the locals from lashing out.

With Trent (John Marrs) and Gretchen (Lena Wilcox) running a gang bent on robbing the general store (by proxy) and a stagecoach converted to freight hauling, it’s all Sheriff Dunlap and his deputy (Trent Culkin) can do to go a whole day without a shootout.

There’s backstabbing afoot, and a land scheme in play. Neither of them makes any sense.

The period-correct but sparse Gammons Gulch Movie Set (Is it still for sale?) lays out a common problem for no-budget Westerns — more extras and cast members than buildings to house, feed and employ them. It’s a convincing looking village, but just a bare bones “movie” version of an Old West town.

That’s quibbling, as is any mention of the movie’s dialogue anachronisms and the screwy choice to have the sheriff a well-read man into thermodynamics, “kinetic theory” and the like.

Maybe he should be reading up on the law — misexplaining “due process” to a stranger (Griffin Wade) who just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“You’re a good man,” saloon gal Mary (Mercedes Peterson) declares. “Some things ‘good’ can’t fix.”

That might be the best line of dialogue. The worst?

“They went THATaway!”

There’s a hold-up by highwaymen (and a highwaywoman), a shipment of nitroglycerin to contend with and with every new body, the sheriff has another face to put on the apparitions that fill his dreams and rattle his waking hours.

I always appreciate the degree of difficulty filmmakers take on when they tackle a period piece, especially a Western, instead of the broke movie maker’s favorite genre — horror.

But director Stefan Colson and screenwriter Brandon Cahela take their shot at trying it both ways, and fail in both genres.

Rating: unrated, violence, profanity

Cast: Owen Williams, Trent Culkin, Griffin Wade, Lena Wilcox and John Marrs.

Credits: Directed by Stefan Colson, scripted by Brandon Cahela. A Well Go USA release.

Running time: 1:21

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