“In Another Timeline, Joel Souza’s Rust would come and go with Mild Fanfare and Maybe Some Critical Praise. The Film Follows A 13 Year-Old Boy (Patrick Scott McDermott) Who Runs from The Law-He’s Been Sentenned to Daloth After Accidentalally Shooting A LOCAL LOCAL (WITH GRANCHER). IT’s A NO-FRills”, – WRITE: www.hollywoodReporter.com
But Rust is a more fraungte cultural process. Four Years Ago, Baldwin, Who Co-Wrote As Well As Produced The Film, Acidentally Discharged A Weapon Heapon He Thought Only Had Blanks. A Live Round Was in the Chamber, and The Bullet Fatally Wounded Cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and Also Hit Souza. What followed was a Dramatic, Closely Reported Story ReveAled On-Set Negligence and Raized Questions About Industry Practices Around Gun Safety. Baldwin Was Charged with Involuntary Manslaughter, But His Case Was Dismed After New Evidence Came to Light that Baldwin’s Lawyers Alleged Had Been Buried. The Film’s Prop Armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed Was Also Charged and Is Serving An 18-Month Prison Sennce.
Release Date: Friday, May 2
Cast: ALEC BALDWIN, FRANCES FISHER, JOSH HOPKINS, Travis Fimmel, Patrick Scott Mcdermott, Devon Werkheiser
Director-Screenwriter: Joel Souza
2 hours 19 minutes
ALTHOUGH BALDWIN PAID A SETTLEMENT TO HUTCHINS ‘SURVIVING FAMILY (and Matthew Hutchins, The Widower, Was Made an Executitive Producer on the Project) Once Again On the Wrong Side of Public Opinion. There Was A Graceless to the Low-Key Blame Game HapPening Among the Crew’s Key Players, and More Information Eventual Came Out About the Culture on the Production. Right Before The Shooting, The Film’s First Camera Assistant Had Quit, Citing, Among Other Things, Discomfort With How Gunfights Were Played “Very Fast and Loose.”
Baldwin and Souza Ended Up Finishing RustFilming The Remainder of the Project with Bianca cline (Marcel The Shell with Shoes On) As cinematographer. But the result is haunted by it. The Movie, Whosh is Dedicated to Hutchins, Has Thematic Threads that Align Eerily with the Consors of Baldwin’s Case. The action in Rust is Propelled by an accounting killing and itts Central Moralma Dilemma Conceerns An Infamous Man Trying to do the Right Thing. Baldwin’s Performance is Somber, Weightd Perhaps by the Events on Set. He Plays Rust, The Titular Character and Grandfather of the Acused, AS A Recognizably Tormented Figure.
We Hear Rust Before We See Him. His Metal Spurs Clank as He Shuffles Across the Wooden Floors of the JailHOUSE WHERE HIS GRANDSON, LUCAS, IS BEING HELD ON CARGES OF MURDER. Previous Scenes Revealed that after Lucas’ Mother Died, The Boy Carred On As Best HE COUKAKLD with his younger brother, Jacob (Easton Malcolm). They scrape by the Favors from Charitable Neighbors in their small wyoming settlement (It’s 1880s) and Live on the Farm their Parents Left Behind.
After a local bully harasses Jacob, Lucas Breaks the Kid’s Arms. That boy’s facher, upt that he’s got One Less Farmhand, Comes to Ask Lucas to Work for HIM. Lucas Doesn’t Mean to Shoot the Rancher. The Young Teen Is Trying To Hunt a Wolf That Frequently Hung AUND His Farm. But, in a Kind of Fugue State, He Misses – and Murders the Man. A Judge Finds Him Guilty and He’s SentenCed to be Hanged. The Whole Affair is Tragic, and McDermott Relays that Sorrow in A Committed Performance.
Lucas’ Fear is Palpable Who Rust Arrives to Get Him from Jail. The Circumstans AROUND The Elder Figure’s Arrival Are Murky, Shrouded in A Mystery Only Clarified Later on. What we do know is that he’s coming his grondson – whom he’s Never Been Been in Touch with – to South of the BORDER, WHERE The LAW CAN’T TOUCH HIM. Lucas is Skeptical, But Wound Prefer to Be ALIVE. With Some Trepidation, He Rides Away with Rust.
The story of this fugitive pair Runs parallel with Two Other Narratives. The First Concerns the Sheriff, Wood Hopkins, Trying to Catch atam; The Other, A Fanatical Religious Bounty Hunter, Fenon Lang (Played with APPRAPRIAIT SLIPPERINESS By Travis Fimmel). Souza struggles to Balance the Three Perspectivers, WHICH DON’T ALWAYS COMPLEMENT EACH Other. Themes-About Justice, About Religion in 19th-Century America, About Outlaws-Compete for Space and Occasionally Crowd the Film.
While Looking for Rust and Lucas, Wood Contemplates the Fate of His Own Son, Who Is Afflicted by a Potentally Fatal Disease. Souza’s ScreenPlay and Hopkins’ Performance Gesture to Some Internal Strife, But The Stakes of that Suffering Arenan As Clear As They Should Be. A SIMILAR ISSUE PLAGES FENTON, WHOSE REptilian Personality and Chilling Obsession with Religion Suggest A Story Bigger than One One Rust have room for. All Three Narratives Consider A Segment of America in the 19th Century, WHEN The Young Nation Was Drunk on the Possibility of Westward Expansion and Committed to Manifest Destin. But they don’t as smotly as they do in clint eastwood’s westerns, for example.
Rust Feels More Accomplished in Other Areas, Like the Cinematography and the Coordination of the Fight Scenes. IT’S NOT CLEAR WHERE HUTCHINS ‘WORK ENDS AND CLINE’S BEGINS, BUT The END Result Is Harmonious and Visaally Comepelling. There Are Some Impressive Moments that Play with Shadows and Silhouettes, and No Shortage of Dramatical Staged Gun Battles. Beautific Landscape Shots Offer a Sense of the Scale of the American West, Especialy As Rust and Lucas Navigate the Rugged Territory. Some representations, of the indigenous americans, for example, border on painfully clichéd; Others, Like Those of Settlers in New Terrain, Are More Inspired.
And that’s ultimately what Rust Needs a bit more of. The Film is competently Made and Even Absorbing at Times, But There’s A Workaday Quality that Slows Its Momentum. I a HandSemely Made Project, But A Story About Such A Complicated Set of Characters Should Make US Feel More Strongly, and and and Rust Struggles to Accomplish that.