Movie Review: Hollywood’s biggest scandal is reported, and exposed by Women — “She Said”

We pick up the tail end of a story of reporter Megan Twohey (Carey Mulligan) was just finishing up, the 2016 research and publishing her expose of Donald Trump’s legion of sexual assault accusers, and facing death threats and an indifferent electorate that put the man in the White House despite everything we’d learned about his character and utter lack of it. “You are a DISGUSTING human being,” we hear the disgusting human being Trump — an impersonator, here — shout at her on the phone. Twohey has to watch herself reviled by Fox News host Bill O’Reilly.

That experience made Twohey reluctant to go down this road again on a new story. But Kantor is seen seeking Twohey’s advice about getting women to open up. And after O’Reilly’s career-ending sexual predation and payoff scandal blew up, the film suggests, the nation’s indifference changed, and eventually the paper added Twohey to the ever-widening Weinstein investigation.

And we start to meet actresses and ex-employees still shaken by what happened to them, many of them suffering life-altering assaults decades before. Rose McGowan, Weinstein’s first and most outspoken accuser, is reached by phone (voiced by another actress), and bitterly relates how frustrating it is “to shout and have no one listen.”

Woman after woman hangs up on Twohey, or slams a door in Kantor’s face, after first giving her a look of shock and pain.

Samantha Morton plays a onetime British publicist with Miramax who reported her experiences and those of others, and was one among many whose silence was bought — paid off by a “system” set up to protect Weinstein from everyone he abused. Morton gets across how furious the woman still is in just a single, can’t-look-away scene.Ashley Judd had already come very close to naming Weinstein as her own Hollywood rapist, and seeing her speak at the Women’s March on Washington after Trump’s election, she is approached. Judd plays herself here, and knowing what we know about what Weinstein did to kill her career, that’s a tasty bit of acting revenge. And then we meet the older woman whose story frames this film. Laura Madden was an Irish girl who stumbled across a period piece being filmed near her home and talked her way onto the set and into the business, a history related in a couple of dialogue-free scenes that open “She Said.” The last of those introductory scenes is her running down a city street, hysterical and in tears.

The radiant Jennifer Ehle (the definitive Elizabeth Bennett on TV;s “Pride and Prejudice”) plays the adult Madden, a mother long-removed from the film business, facing a cancer scare when the reporters track her down. She won’t talk. Until, that is, she gets her Irish up at being threatened.Ehle is the heart and face of “She Said,” and the canniest bit of casting, because she will break your heart over what this woman endured.Mulligan, playing a reporter who starts this story pregnant and goes through post-partum depression in its aftermath, gives Twohey a world-weariness, and an easily-triggered fire that explodes with the right provocation. Kazan’s Kantor is a case study in empathy journalism, finding ways to connect with sources to get them to open up, or relating her own post partum depression to Twohey as a way of bonding so that the senior reporter will pitch in.Kantor pops in unannounced on those who won’t respond to her calls, breaks confidence to one potential source’s husband (a non-no) and uses their shared New York Jewish heritage to wring facts out of a male ex-Miramax exec.And we see her trying to turn away her pre-tween daughter’s questions about this very adult subject she’s writing about, bowled over by the kid’s quick grasp of what the all-binding acronym NDA meant to Weinstein and how it protected him from punishment for so long.

The implication of including all these daughters in this film of this story? That they were enduring this ordeal, all of them, so that their children would never face what they had to put up with.

I like the film’s treatment of the shoe-leather and rent-a-car tedium of journalism, but couldn’t help but notice Kazan portraying an eager note-taker who sits, in every interview, with her pen poised on the paper, transfixed, taking in what she’s hearing but never ever writing anything down.Patricia Clarkson plays the paper’s special projects editor encouraging and urging on her reporters. Andre Braugher plays Times editor Dean Basquet, bringing a gruff no-nonsense bluster to the paper’s direct dealings with the infamously bullying Weinstein. There aren’t many laughs in this sad, infuriating story. But Basquet’s dismissal of threatening, intimidating and stalling calls from Weinstein are hilarious. Any journalist who ever dealt with the man, directly or indirectly (I did, once or twice) knows you just didn’t hang up on Harvey. Even the general public picked up on that ogre vibe.

The film’s similarities to “Spotlight,” which was about the Catholic Church’s worldwide predatory priests cover-up, are inescapable. But Schrader and screenwriter Lenkiewicz give their film a decidedly feminine and feminist bent. Women urge other women to “use your experience to protect other people,” Kantor gets a tad starstruck from all her encounters with and conversations with “Gwyneth” (never seen), and there are lots of hugs of support and tears of relief when this courageous woman or that one takes a stand and faces its consequences, all over again.

No, you just can’t make the act of transcribing notes, reaching conclusions, writing and re-writing, editing and then, almost comically, two reporters and four editors standing over a single PC reading what they’ve produced hitting the “publish” button “cinematic” Even the fear that competing reporter Ronan Farrow’s expose would publish before theirs lacks high stakes drama, and gets mentioned but played-down here. But Schrader lets her players do the heavy lifting, and to a one, they don’t let her down. The women of this scandal and this movie about it reporting it make “She Said” a thoroughly engrossing account of how one of the touchstone stories of our time came to light, one door knocked-on, one tearful recollection at a time.

Rating: R for language and descriptions of sexual assault.

Cast: Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan, Jennifer Ehle, Patricia Clarkson, Samantha Morton, Andre Braugher and Ashley Judd.

Credits: Directed by Maria Schrader, scripted by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, based on the NY Times reporting of Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey. A Universal release.

Running time: 2:08

Rating: R for language and descriptions of sexual assault.

Cast: Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan, Jennifer Ehle, Patricia Clarkson, Samantha Morton, Andre Braugher and Ashley Judd.

Credits: Directed by Maria Schrader, scripted by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, based on the NY Times reporting of Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey. A Universal release.

Running time: 2:08

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The telephone voice of Harvey Weinstein in “She Said,” was it this guy?

We know that the many threatening phone calls recreated for the new drama about the Harvey Weinstein serial sexual assaults scandal “She Said” aren’t actual recordings of the Miramax/Weinstein Co. chief yelling “WHO did you talk to? Was it Gwyneth?” It isn’t Weinstein himself.

But damn, that guy sounds JUST like him. Who could it be? A gifted mimic who took on the assignment? Or somebody the film’s producers knew and/or heard could do a spot-on, blustering, bellowing King of Hollywood imitation?

I stayed through the film’s credits to see if that actor might be identified. No. I did a quick online search which also turned up nothing.

As picking out famous voices, even ones disguised in portraying someone else, is kind of my superpower (public radio veteran), I concentrated every time I heard the film’s Weinstein and picked out what I think was the unmistakable timbre, pitch and Weinsteinish edge of this actor turned actor-director.

Usually, he works for Disney and Marvel, and this was a Universal production. So maybe not. But there are any number of reasons for not wanting “credit” in the film, as he made movies for Harvey and had plenty of first hand knowledge of the voice.

And he sounds like Weinstein already. Could it be the “Chef” pictured below?

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Today’s DVD donation? “Sexual Drive” arrives at the Altamonte Springs, FL library

I didn’t get around to reviewing this one. Not a fresh title, arrived unsolicited by mail, Japanese, a trio of short stories about sex and food, reviewing seemed pointless and labor intensive.

And I have hesitated to palm it off on any of the scores of public libraries I visit, stop by to write in or simply pass by because few if any would put this in their stacks for fear of conservative county commissioners backlash.

Especially in Florida.

But I will make an exception in this case. The Altamonte Springs Library is in the old Altamonte Hotel, a repurposed single story structure in this old Orlando suburb.

And it has the most uncomfortable seating of any library I have ever been to, and I’ve frequented hundreds of them over the years.

Fifteen minutes of sitting in these high chair torture devices and you’re doubled over in pain for hours. You walk in and see others sitting on the floor, outside, anywhere rather than risk back injury on these Banned in Guantanamo gadgets that even Taco Bell, which wants patrons tonLeave in seven minutes or less, turned down.

So, add it to your collection, sell it at a book sale (to pay for new chairs) or toss it, Altamonte Springs.

Movie Nation, adding cinema variety to libraries all over the Southeast, one DVD, one library at a time.

L

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Movie Review: Machine Gun Kelly goes full Rock Star on Drugs — “Taurus”

“Taurus” is more proof that there’s little new to say in the self-destructive rock star movie genre, that a Cobain by any other name is either fated to end up drowning in his own vomit, or not.

Writer-director Tim Sutton’s second feature with his new muse, rapper Machine Gun Kelly, billed under his real name (Colson Baker) here, is a portrait in drugged-up pop star indulgence. What it’s not very good at getting across is the source of the pain, the disaffection that drives our anti-hero’s excesses or his art.

The script has a murkiness to characters and character motivations, and Sutton doesn’t help itself in the casting or the under-explaining that goes on. Is this rapper Cole Taurus, holed up in an LA rental working on a new album or hauled out to the studio everyday by his long suffering assistant (Maggie Hasson) to that he can “spit” some more rhymes, seeing his ex (Megan Fox, Baker’s current off-camera flame) in the face of other women? Is he wracked by guilt over the neglect he shows their little girl (Avery Tiuu Essex), who is being raised by a woman (Siri Miller) whose relationship to all this is left hanging?

As I’m not his shrink, just a guy who watches movies and takes notes to make sense of what I’m seeing, beats me.

Assorted women drift into Cole’s life. One (Naomi Wild) has the perfect voice to co-star on his songs with, that kittenish girly lilt/growl so in vogue today.

Another brunette (Sara Silva) has his attention and maybe his interest. Because she’s beautiful and eager and, oh yeah, she brings him drugs.

The ex (Fox) is glimpsed in heated flashbacks, or flashed on the face of some other lover.

Ruby Rose plays the hard-partying punk regarded by Cole’s manager (Scoot McNairy), as the worst influence of all. She’s just a spikey-haired minx who can’t say no — to most whatever Cole has in mind.

And then there’s the constant, the put-upon, abused and blamed Ilana (Hasson of “Malignant,” TV’s “Impulse” and “Mr. Mercedes”). She’s the one who has to ask “Are you high?” as a rhetorical question. She’s the one who won’t move the car until he’s stopped hanging so low out the window that his knuckles drag on the pavement. Whenever he’s late for something or misunderstood or ignored an instruction, she’s the one he chews out, often in public.

“You’ve got a lunch meeting.”

“Negative!”

“What do you mean, ‘negative?'”

“As in I won’t be there, missing in action.”

The opening image of “Taurus” is a scene with a family pondering what’s wrong with their cable when their young son walks into the room, waving a gun which he wants to know whether or not is “real,” with violence sure to follow. That will eventually get the attention of our morbid, mean and yet insanely popular rap star. Fodder for inspiration?

But a couple of other scenes stand out here, mainly because they’re pitched higher than the many generic “He’s drunk and won’t leave the bar/strip club/home” ones, or are more revealing about our protagonist.

In one, he lights into Ilana and — mid-public-humiliation — she goes off on the arrogant, childish, irresponsible junkie “douche” she works for, just as publicly. It’s bracing and loud and what passes for “tough love” in a toxic, co-dependent relationship. God knows why she needs him. Maybe the money’s too good.

In another moment, less explicable, Ilana talks the crew of rappers and engineers in the studio to let a pizza guy fanboy come in to get a photo. Why she would agree to that, considering who she’s dealing with, is a mystery. When the other rappers — all black — act their friendliest to the pizza guy, insecure Cole dismisses him the moment he hears this new guy “spits” as well.

Those moments feel real and fresh, and there are bits and pieces of what feels like reality scattered throughout the film. But the tropes, which have been around since the first “A Star is Born,” on through “The Rose” and into “Ray,” “Sid & Nancy” and “Get on Up,” are worn out now.

Sure, every few weeks there’s another news story on this or that act of self-destruction by a pop singer, rapper or rocker. But just because they keep doing it is no reason to run through the same old suicide by needle on the “died too young” trail across the screen. Tragic as they are, these deaths have become cliches. Movies recreating them don’t even move us any more because we’ve become numbed to the self-destructive waste.

Baker has decent, head-to-toe tattooed screen presence. Tis character isn’t much of a stretch, as the real rapper has probably been around real basket cases like this guy.

But director Sutton doesn’t so much sympathize with either the character or the actor playing him as keep them at arm’s length. Sutton knows he’s made his star play a cliche, and the star can’t have missed that either. Why sweat the details if you figure that out early on?

Rating: unrated, drug abuse, sex, profanity

Cast: Colson Baker, Maggie Hanson, Naomi Wild, Ron G, Ruby Rose, Scoot McNary and Megan Fox

Credits: Scripted and directed by Tim Sutton: An RLJE release.

Running time: 1:38

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Movie Preview: Vince Vaughn scripts a little Holiday Vulgarity — “Christmas with the Campbells”

Brittany Snow and Justin Long, Alex Moffat and Julia Duffy, George Wendt and a lot of off-color jokes decorate this Dec. 2 release.

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Netflixable? Lindsay Lohan is “Falling for Christmas,” and staging a comeback?

Most everybody had that moment when they just gave up on Lindsay Lohan.

The scandals, the tsunami of gossip, the poor choices off screen and on, few actresses handled the transition from child starlet to adult attention magnet more poorly. Yes, it’s an awful test for even the strongest psyches, and her parental guidance leaned notoriously towards the Britney Spears side of the spectrum. But at some point, you’re well over 21 and what goes wrong is on you and you alone.

I gave the “Mean Girls” queen the benefit of the doubt right up to what should have been a golden opportunity that she turned into a rhymes-with-fitshow. “The Canyons” had one of the great writer-directors, Paul Schrader, a script by “Less Than Zero” author Bret Easton Ellis and a topic — the vapid, vain dysfunction of lives lived on the fringes of LA’s beautiful, rich and entitled.

Lohan diva’d her way into deserved oblivion in 2013 by misbehaving on that set and ruining what could have been something of a restart for her and a filmmaker who would later come back with a vengeance with “First Reformed.”

But as most of what she did she did to herself, it’d be churlish to not think she deserves another shot. So, a Netflix “Hallmark-style” Christmas rom-com? “Falling for Christmas?” Lindsay, now a high-mileage 36, looking winsome, taking pratfalls, wholly-engaged in the work and even doing a little “Jingle Bell Rock” sing-along?

Good for her. And good for Netflix, which is also giving a Hallmarkish rom-com home to the less problematic ex child starlet Victoria Justice, among others.

The movie? Oh, it’s insipid. You half expect to see Dolly Parton — Long
May She Rein — show up as a singing Christmas angel. Yeah, it’s like that.

Lohan plays a hotel heiress and influencer who is trying to fend off her father’s (Jack Wagner) efforts to make her grow up and take on work in the family business. Sierra is meeting her super-influencer and boyfriend of a year, the vapid Euro-trash Tad (George Young) at one of Dad’s upscale mountainside ski resorts. Tad is planning on proposing — and posting online about it — on a mountain top.

Things go wrong, and next thing we know, Tad is stranded in an ice shanty on a frozen lake with poacher Ralph (Sean Dillingham), Sierra’s crashed into a snowbank and developed amnesia and nobody knows they’re missing.

“I’m like…unclaimed luggage,” our puzzled heroine declares.

The freckled redhead who doesn’t know her name is now “Sarah,” and staying with her rescuer Jake (Chord Overstreet), a widower who runs the failing B & B down the hill, who doesn’t know who she is and who has a winsome mother-in-law (Alejandra Flores) and little girl (Olivia Perez) who falls for this woman who can’t remember her name and lacks even the most basic domestic skills, but who takes interest in her and shares some of the secrets of being a girl with her.

So what we’ve got is “Overboard” without the devious edge of a guy taking advantage of a rich amnesiac, grafted onto “It’s a Wonderful Life” (without an angel, Dolly Parton or otherwise) or “White Christmas,” where our hapless innkeeper has to learn how beloved and valued he is by those who love him.

There’s just nothing to this. A typical scene is a brief, helpful gift-wrapping lesson Jake gives Sarah/Sierra. There’s nothing cute, funny or charming in this 30-45 seconds of screen time. And yet it’s what passes for “home for the holidays” warmth, wit and wisdom.

Spoiler alert — it’s not funny. Second spoiler alert — the only laugh in “Falling” is “Sierra” waking up by turning the TV on to Netflix, which is wall-to-wall holiday movies like…”Falling for Christmas.”

But Lohan does what she can with this thin, treacly material, shows she can be a team player and bring value without (one hopes) drama to a set and a project that may not be an A-picture, but still gets her name out there in a non gossipy way. Good for her.

Call it a win, and maybe a proof of concept of the “I can still show up on time, act, and bring a little sentiment and sparkle to a part” variety. And call it a day.

Rating: TV-PG

Cast: Lindsay Lohan, Chord Overstreet, George Young, Olivia Perez, Alejandra Flores, Sean Dillingham and Jack Wagner

Credits: Directed by Janeen Damian, scripted by Jeff Bonnett, Janeen Damian, Michael Damian, Ron Oliver. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:35

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Movie Review: Russell Crowe shows off his “Poker Face” in this Aussie thriller

Every movie opens with a world of possibilities and steadily, one by one, closes off those directions it might take. A good film is one that presents promising options, picks a more intriguing and perhaps less expected one, and maybe trips up our expectations along the way.

Russell Crowe‘s new writing, directing and starring effort “Poker Face” opens with piece of Aussie childhood that climaxes with a teenaged poker bluff that foils a bully. We then meet the adult poker player (Crowe) as he’s losing himself in the paintings at a museum. His sad-faced guise intrigues an attractive artist who furtively snaps pictures and clumsily tells him “I want to paint you.”

In in the third scene, our rich gambler drives his black Rolls Royce out into the country to consult a sage old shaman (the great character actor Jack Thompson) who “reads” him, figures out our hero’s state of mind and his health, reassures him that “You will know when it’s time” and passes on something that might give him “comfort” knowing that he has “some means of control.”

Three sequences set up a man with a past full of childhood friends, a gambling “career” that paid handsomely, a terminal illness and the interest of a painter, who might like more than his face, his “story” for instance.

From that collection of possibilities, “Poker Face” draws to an inside straight — a straight-up heist picture. And what’s the first rule of poker, mate?

Never draw to an inside straight.

Liam Hemsworth, the rapper turned writer-director-actor RZA, Aden Young, Steve Bastoni and Daniel MacPherson play the adult “oldest friends” who race a Roller, a Bentley and a Maybach to rich host Jake’s clifftop modernist mansion for one last poker game.

Molly Grace plays the widowed Jake’s daughter, who doesn’t know, and Brooke Satchwell plays an ex-wife who does.

And Paul Tassone is the fiery, ruthless leader of the gang that busts in on the festivities.

Crowe isn’t a first time director, but this heartless bore of a thriller makes one forget the pleasures of “The Water Diviner.” He leans on voice-over narration to deliver attempted profundities.

“If luck is leaving you, apply what you can to change its motion…Maximize your wins, minimize your losses.”

He tries to animate the poker game itself with extreme close-ups of players, chips and cards, and never makes the stakes seem high or the results remotely interesting. Even the in-game banter is shockingly mundane. But then, this isn’t “Rounders” or any of a slew of better gambling pictures. Crowe is rarely dull as an actor, but his poker-faced turn in “Poker Face” proves the exception to that rule.

The shifts in tone, stakes and genre are abrupt and so clumsily-handled you’re allowed to wonder “What just happened?” And the heist is such a non-starter as to leave one at a loss as to what the Oscar winning actor, one of my favorites, ever saw in this.

Rating: unrated, violence, profanity

Cast: Russell Crowe, Liam Hemsworth, RZA, Aden Young, Brooke Satchwell, Molly Grace, Steve Bastoni, Daniel MacPherson, Benedict Hardie, Paul Tassone, and Jack Thompson

Credits: Directed by Russell Crowe, scripted by Stephen M. Coates and Russell Crowe. A Screen Media release.

Running time: 1:35

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Next screening? #MeToo, and what “She Said” to blow it up

This Oscar bait features a top cast and an awful Hollywood scandal and the New York Times beating Ronan Farrow to the Harvey Weinstein scoop.

Curious to see if “She Said” even mentions the race to publish.

Love Carey Mulligan and Jennifer Ehle, Clarkson and the names in the cast.

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Movie Review: Venezuela’s bid for an Oscar — “The Box (La Caja)”

The new film from award-winning Venezuelan filmmaker Lorenzo Vigas is a lean, quiet and disturbing parable about global capitalism as it is practiced in much of the Third World.

With “The Box” (“La Caja”), the director of “From Afar” pulls us into the sad, mysterious plight of a boy dispatched to the world of giant sweatshops and ruthlessly exploited workers of northern Mexico. And through this poker-faced child, we get a brutal taste of the grim cost of a system still stuck in a Darwinian Wild West era in much of the world.

Hatzín (Hatzín Navarrete) has been sent north by his grandmother to retrieve his father’s body. A bus deposits him at a site where trailers have been set up and officialdom is IDing corpses and turning over remains to next of kin in large, coffin-shaped urns.

We can see where the bodies have come from, and it’s too small and tidy a space for a plane or bus crash. What happened? Hatzín asks no questions, and seems strangely unmoved by the process.

“I’m not crying, grandma,” he tells her by phone (in Spanish with English subtitles). He is young, maybe 13, and apparently estranged from the man whose body is in “La Caja.”

Wandering through the nearby town, he spies a man he is sure is his dad, a man who shrugs off his insistence that he recognizes him. Mario (Hernán Mendoza) is bluff and bearded and patient enough to hear the kid out. There’s a flash of compassion as the boy comes back, still insisting, and Mario buys him a drink and offers him bus fare.

Nothing doing, the kid seems to think. “There’s been a mistake” he tells the forensics team at what we slowly figure out is a mass burial site. Hatzín will dump the box on them and make a pest of himself to this stranger, who indulges, then bristles at and finally takes him in.

Hatzín will discover an underworld of labor recruiting, Amazon warehouse-sized sewing factories and peasant labor coming from near and far for work in what one recruiter describes, over and over, as Mexico’s “war” “with the Chinese,” a war with opportunities for quick cash but sometimes deadly consequences, from deceitful exploitation to truck hijackings and worse.

Vigas and fellow screenwriters Paula Markovich and Laura Santullo limit the dialogue, pulling the viewer in, forcing us to plumb the mystery of this unnamed place much as Hatzin does.

We ponder the kid’s annoying persistence and why this burly stranger is so tolerant of it, until he isn’t.

We hear the pitches to workers, and like Hatzin, observe how the promises differ from reality. Some are smart enough to see they’re being exploited, and start speaking up to others.

And we’re immersed in Mario’s reality a former sewing factory worker who saw the real money was in working with middle men and small-sweatshop owner-operators, filling buses with poor people eager to work, unaware of the trap they’re signing up for.

“Be happy with what you have,” they’re counseled. But if they aren’t?

The kid’s journey will take him from “You’re too honest” into things he’d never think he was capable of. It’s like an initiation into the drug world saga, but with lower cash stakes and cheap, ready-to-wear fashions as its product.

Young Navarette doesn’t give away what Hatzin is thinking, which serves the layers that cover where the narrative is going but robs “The Box” of emotional power. The film can feel documentary-clinical as it lays out this world, this “system” and the gregarious Marios who run it.

Mendoza lets us see the older’s man’s kindly, then cunning sides, and wonder which tack he will finally take with this bright boy he’s brought into his trust.

And through them Vigas shows us what’s behind that Walmart T-shirt that lasts two or three washings, that Target dress that loses its color just as quickly, and the true cost of anything that seems cheap, but really isn’t.

Rating: unrated, violence

Cast: Hatzín Navarrete and Hernán Mendoza

Credits: Directed by Lorenzo Vigas, scripted by Paula Markovich, Laura Santullo and Lorenzo Vigas. A MUBI release.

Running time: 1:33

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Movie Review: Momoa gets a new “Willie Boy” story made — “The Last Manhunt”

“Aquaman” and “Dune” hunk Jason Momoa figures prominently in the advertising for “The Last Manhunt.” He’s in just three or four scenes in it, but he co-wrote the story, so fair enough.

And he’s the one who got this new version of the story of “Desert Runner” Willie “Boy” Brown on film. This “true story” Western is a tad malnourished, stolid and depressingly downbeat. But it’s a tragic story. Even if you use a lot of Native American actors and Native American plainsong in the score, it would take a special touch to spruce up the few moments of action, lift the pathos of the couple on the run and make the quarrelsome posse entertaining enough to watch.

That touch is mostly missing here. But the story is still fascinating.

Willie Boy Brown was a Chemehuevi Indian (Southern Paiute) who tried to run off with his distant cousin girlfriend after accidentally killing her disapproving father. He’s been the subject of legend, lore, a book titled “The Last Manhunt” and a 1969 Western — “Tell Them Willie Boy Was Here” — starring Robert Redford as the reluctant sheriff hunting the fugitives, and Italian American actor Robert Blake in the title role.

Set in 1909, “Manhunt” is a “closing of the West” tale, a literal last posse-on-horseback “manhunt” through Joshua Tree, Twentynine Palms and environs, promising striking scenery, tragic young love, endless searching for water as well as the man the posse is hunting, and violence.

Martin Sensmeier of “Wind River” and “Yellowstone” is Willie, Hawaiian actress Mainei Kinimaka (of the Momoa TV series “See”) is Carlotta, the daughter of a medicine man (Zahn McClarnon) who has to track down the 16 year-old to save her from an “inappropriate” match. “You’re BLOOD,” he reminds them both.

That won’t stop Willie Boy. His second meeting with the father over his beloved leads to an argument and a shooting. Tribe members, who tracked them down when they tried to run off the first time, are ready to do it again. But a shooting means the recently-widowed, depressed and crawling into a bottle sheriff (director Christian Camargo) is involved now, with an armed posse of men of varying abilities and tolerance.

A reporter (Mojean Aria) cynically tries to join their crew, willing to manipulate the story which he recognizes needs some sizzle — an editor lowers Carlotta’s age to 14 — and that “You lack a great ending.”

The opening acts have the novelty of filming an under-filmed part of the desert southwest, with palm trees and Joshua Trees and deep canyons adjoining the vast expanse of desert. But the leads are just bland and there’s no sugar-coating that.

The middle acts, posse-centered, are talky and argumentative and don’t have quite enough conflict to engage the viewer.

And the finale can’t get here soon enough.

Momoa, playing a Native named Big Jim, turns up here and there, not enough to add spark to a picture whose score sets the tone, and is eventually overwhelmed by funereal strings — lots of cellos in tears.

I appreciate the effort it took to get a Western made in this day and age. It’s a good story. Redford knew it. So does Momoa. And there are some scattered stand-out moments.

But the relative poverty of the production shows in every too-clean-to-have-been-hiking-through-the-desert costume, every wish-they-could-have-cast-a-pricier, showier actor or actress, every “Let’s hire a script doctor to tighten/quicken/juice-this-up” suggestion ignored.

Rating: R for some violence and language

Cast: Martin Sensmeier, Mainei Kinimaka, Raoul Max Trujillo, Brandon Oakes, Amy Seimetz, Mojean Aria, Christian Camargo and Jason Momoa.

Credits: Directed by Christian Carmago, scripted by Thomas Pa’a Sibbett, Jason Momoa. A Saban Films release.

Running time: 1:43

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