Red Rock West (Бар у дороги / На запад от Красной Скалы)
DVD9, PAL | Dolby Digital - ENG/ITA/SPA/RUS | Subtitles: 7 languages | 6,2 GB
or DVD-Rip | AVI, XviD 720x400 | MP3@128 - RUS/ENG | 7 EXT. Subtitles | 1,5 GB
1992 | Genre: Post-Noir / Modern-Noir / Crime Thriller | Director by John Dahl | ~ 94 min
John Dahl directed and co-wrote (along with his brother Rick Dahl) this quirky and energetic film noir that, after a well-received screening at the Toronto Film Festival, was consigned to oblivion before resurfacing on cable television. When the owner of a San Francisco movie theater, who was a big fan of the film, arranged for a theatrical release, the film clicked and toured the country as an art house hit. The film concerns eternal loser Michael (Nicolas Cage), down to his last five dollars and looking for work. He finds himself at a bar in the town of Red Rock. The bartender, Wayne (J.T. Walsh) eyes him suspiciously and asks him, "You must be Lyle, from Dallas". Michael, eager to earn some cash, agrees. It seems Wayne has a job for Michael, but what Michael doesn't realize until too late is that the job is to kill Wayne's wife for $10,000. Michael heads out to Wayne's farm with the cash to warn Wayne's wife, Suzanne (Lara Flynn Boyle). Suzanne responds by offering to double Michael's fee if he will kill her husband instead. Michael takes the money and tries to leave town….В поисках работы, судьба заносит вольного скитальца Майкла Уильямса в небольшой городок Red Rock (Красная Скала). В местном баре он знакомится с его владельцем Уэйном Брауном, который по ошибке принимает его за киллера, которого он нанял через посредников с целью убийства собственной жены. Безысходное положение Майла вынуждает его принять аванс за подобную работёнку…
• Written by John Dahl & Rick Dahl
• Directed by John Dahl
• Nicolas Cage as Michael Williams
• J. T. Walsh as Wayne Brown
• Lara Flynn Boyle as Suzanne Brown
• Dennis Hopper as Lyle from Dallas
• Dwight Yoakam as Truck Driver
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Film noir persists long past its "golden era" of the 1940s and '50s because the forces that created it — the sense of futility generated by capitalism's lopsided benefits package — continue to exist. But noir has moved from the dark decay of wet city streets to the bleak openness of the West. The American frontier is no longer a rich, vital land waiting for wagon trainloads of pioneers or plucky individuals to conquer it; now it's a vast, dark, lonely prairie, more hopeless than hostile. Recent "neo-noirs" like «True Romance» have leavened this hopelessness with appropriate dollops of black humor, but the real standout in this style is John Dahl's dusty western tale, Red Rock West.
Red Rock West tells a familiar tale in fresh, unfamiliar ways. Here we have an innocent man drawn by circumstance into a netherworld of criminality. The innocent is regular guy Michael Williams (Nicholas Cage), who drives 1,200 miles from Texas to Wyoming for an oildrilling job, only to be rejected because of a knee injury. Left with only $5 and a gas-guzzling Cadillac, he manages to make it to the little town of Red Rock. There his passivity and near-muteness make local bar owner Wayne Brown (J. T. Walsh) mistake him for the hitman Brown has hired to kill his wife. Following the classical noir model, Michael's acceptance of a $5000 retainer for this murder plunges him into a drama of betrayal and death, enacted by characters whose motives are obscure through most of the movie.
The film has an underlying mythic aspect — Michael is the unevolved hero who must undergo a moral test to achieve some kind of enlightenment. All the accompanying tests and temptations are present — loads of money, a trickster in the form of a criminal sheriff, a beautiful woman. But director Dahl (who co-wrote the screenplay with his brother Richard) adds droll comic touches that keep the myth from overwhelming the movie.
Red Rock West has some affinity with the work of David Lynch (even in using Lynch favorite Lara Flynn Boyle). There's a similar exploitation of environment, the exposure of a festering underbelly in America's aimless small towns. But Dahl doesn't venture so far afield — he keeps the metaphysics in check, shaking up the audience without leveling them. Like Lynch, he has a strong command of the camera, letting it prowl over lonely highways and barren fields. William Orvis' twangy guitar refrain adds a gorgeous melancholy texture.
The film is filled with visual pleasures, dazzling plot twists that generate serious tension, and first-rate performances. This is certainly Nicholas Cage's best work to date. His Michael is a model of the terse, slightly wasted working class guy who acts as a punching bag for matevolent Fate. He's the latest in a long line of noir drifters who once served society's larger ends, only to find themselves shut out of its riches. Dennis Hopper moves through his typical psychopathic changes as the real hired gun. J. T. Walsh is brilliant as the shady bar owner; nominally a villain, the taut script and Walsh's own subtle acting skills bring the character to sympathetic life. Lara Flynn Boyle (above) makes an entrancing femme fatale, if a bit less fully realized than the three men around her. The plot is filled with surprises, but it's solidly anchored by the taciturn, sexy, sleepy-eyed Cage.
While many neo-noirs lack conviction and treat their material with a kind of dismissive smugness (Romeo Is Bleeding comes to mind here), Red Rock West shows a real affection for its lost characters. With only two features to his credit, John Dahl has established himself as a worthy interpreter of the inexhaustible noir.
^^ all screenshots taken from DVDRip ^^
Untouched DVD9, Video_TS folder:
Aspect Ratio: 1,85:1 (16:9 Anamorphic)
PAL, MPEG-2 720x576, 25 fps
Auto VBR (Nominal bitrate 9800 Kbps)
audio:
English - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround (192 Kbps)
Spanish - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround (192 Kbps)
Italian - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround (192 Kbps)
Русский многоголос. - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround (192 Kbps) - студии "Пифагор"
subtitles:
English, Spanish, Italian, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
Unpacked Size: 6,19 GB
3% Recovery info
RS Total: 6,22 GB
Format: AVI 720 x 400, 12 bit
Aspect Ratio: 16:9 (1,80:1)
Codec: XviD (1.1.2) MPEG 4
Video bitrate: avg. 1987 Kbps, 0,28 b/px, 25 Fps
(Usual DVD players with avi support compatible)
Audio 1 (Russian): Lame MP3 CBR 128 Kbps, 48 kHz / (Size= 86,4 MB)
Audio 2 (English): Lame MP3 ABR 128 Kbps, 48 kHz / (Size= 76,4 MB)
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Italian, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish (.idx/sub)
Rip Date: September 2009
File size: 1504 (+4) MB
3% Recovery info
RS Total: 1,51 GB
Theatrical Release: June 1993
DVD Released: 2005
Original Format: DVD9
Rating: R
Studio: Universal