News of the World (2021)

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Direction: Paul Greengrass
Country: USA

Adapted from Paulette Jiles' 2016 novel of the same name, News of the World is a satisfying Western with a dramatic expansion and a few exciting shootouts that will keep you interested. The film reunites the English writer/director Paul Greengrass, widely recognized by a number of historical, criminal and politically motivated fact-based thrillers (Bloody Sunday, 2002; United 93, 2006; Captain Phillips, 2013) as well as some espionage fiction (three installments of the Bourne action series), and the celebrated American actor Tom Hanks.

After playing Captain Richard Phillips with zeal, the latter impersonates another Captain here - Jefferson Kyle Kidd, a Civil War veteran who left his wife in San Antonio to read the freshest news from town to town. In a Texas village, he bumps into a 10-year-old double orphan girl, Johanna (Helena Zengel), who lost her German parents and then the Kiowa family who raised her. Kidd promises to take her to her only living relatives, an aunt and an uncle, who live in a remote place in Castroville. Along the way, he finds greedy outlaws, exploiters and racists, but also some good souls that, even not preventing startling incidents, will help him to accomplish the task.

Although occasionally bumpy, it’s not my plan to discourage you from watching the film. To a degree, it employs the same stereotyped good and bad characters of the Western genre, but extends its views with the topics of loss and abandonment.

The main issue I’ve found here has to do with the predictability of the story, while the goodhearted central character, who always does the right thing even if he has to reverse its primary decisions, becomes the strongest inspirational factor. More surprises and conflicts would have taken it to more enjoyable places, though.

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