One of the reasons that MR. MAJESTYK (1974) is such a great movie is the fact that Vince Majestyk couldn’t care less about being a hero. He has too much work to do. He just wants to get his melons in and be left alone. And when an arrogant gangster tries to bully him, his stubborn ass refuses to be pushed around. That’s all there is to it. This simple character and story results in Vince Majestyk becoming an incredible badass hero.
Charles Bronson plays Majestyk with complete confidence. He’s not scared of Al Lettieri’s hitman, Frank Renda, one bit. The man’s more of a nuisance to him than anything because he’s keeping him from getting his work done. Majestyk feels authentic as a blue-collar, capable, hardworking man. With Bronson’s weathered features, he fits the part perfectly and looks like a man who’s worked outdoors for decades. That gives the film a credibility many action movies lack. You realize almost immediately that Renda has made a big mistake by going after a guy who is a lot smarter and tougher than he seems. The entire story plays out with a feeling of experience and determination beating misplaced arrogance.
Vince Majestyk is a man who has morals that are proven by his actions, not his words. He treats people the way he wants to be treated. He doesn’t posture or scream and threaten people. He’s a man of his word, and when he’s threatened, he simply draws a line in the sand and refuses to budge. That stubbornness becomes heroic as the villains, and the local law enforcement always underestimates him. And when it’s all said and done, you get the feeling that Majestyk will just get back in his truck and go to work.
That’s ultimately why Vince Majestyk is a great movie hero. He’s tough without being cocky, moral but not preachy, and dangerous even though he’s not Superman. Bronson played a lot of heroic characters over the years, but Vince Majestyk is my personal favorite!
There is a specific kind of cinematic fever dream that only war, isolation, and a touch of madness can produce, and Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now remains its gold standard. Co-written by Coppola and John Milius (the latter a colorful, larger-than-life figure in 1970s Hollywood), the film’s screenplay originally leaned harder into Milius’s romantic vision of martial will before Coppola reshaped it into something more hallucinatory and morally ambiguous. When we talk about the Redux version, released in 2001, twenty-two years after the original, we are not just revisiting that fever dream; we are plunging back into an even more hallucinatory, bloated, and revealing cut of the material.
At over three hours and twenty minutes, Apocalypse Now Redux is both a gift and a test of endurance. For those who only know the theatrical cut, this version feels less like a director’s tweak and more like unearthing a lost, more indulgent diary entry from Coppola’s own heart of darkness. The core remains the same: Captain Benjamin Willard (Martin Sheen), a morally hollowed-out assassin, is sent upriver during the Vietnam War to terminate Colonel Walter Kurtz (Marlon Brando), a once-brilliant Green Beret who has gone rogue and set himself up as a demi-god in the Cambodian jungle. The structure is a loose but unmistakable adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s classic 1899 novella Heart of Darkness, transposing Conrad’s grim critique of Belgian colonialism onto America’s own imperial overreach in Southeast Asia. Conrad’s journey up the Congo River becomes the Navy patrol boat’s crawl up the Nùng River, with each stop revealing a new layer of absurdity, violence, and spiritual decay.
The most immediate thing to address is what Redux adds, because those additions fundamentally alter the rhythm of the film. The theatrical cut is a lean, relentless descent. Redux is a meandering, hypnotic, and sometimes frustratingly pensive journey. Several major extended sequences distinguish this cut from the original. The first involves the Playboy Playmates. In the theatrical cut, we see them briefly at a chaotic USO show. In Redux, we get an extended sequence where Willard’s crew trades a canister of fuel for two hours with the stranded bunnies after their helicopter runs low on fuel. Later comes the brutal, psychedelic chaos of the Do Lung Bridge, which is extended in Redux to emphasize the utter breakdown of command and reality. And finally, deep in the journey, after surviving a tiger attack, Willard and the crew stumble upon the French rubber plantation, where a family of colonial planters refuses to leave their dying world. Each of these sequences grinds the forward momentum in different ways—the bunnies through desperate transaction, the bridge through absurd chaos, the plantation through nostalgic rot.
But to truly appreciate what Coppola is doing in Redux, you have to stop thinking of the Nùng River as a simple journey and start seeing it as a vertical descent—a layered, infernal funnel where each stop corresponds to a different circle of moral decay, much like the structure of Dante Alighieri’s Inferno, the first part of his epic narrative poem The Divine Comedy. The patrol boat is not just transport; it is a cramped, filthy ferry crossing the River Styx, and the further Willard and his crew go, the thinner the veil between civilization and savagery becomes. The Redux version, with its extended sequences, actually sharpens this Dantesque geometry rather than diluting it, because each added stop becomes another hellish layer, another specific flavor of corruption rotting under the jungle canopy. And importantly, the order of these stops tells a specific story of descent. Willard first encounters raw, commodified desire at the USO show, then plunges into the absurd mechanical chaos of the Do Lung Bridge, and finally drifts into the refined, decaying nostalgia of the French plantation—each circle deeper, stranger, and more spiritually corrosive than the last.
Consider the first major stop after leaving the relative order of the Delta: the extended Playboy Playmate sequence. In Dante’s Inferno, the early circles punish the lustful and the gluttonous—sins of appetite and passion that still acknowledge desire, however distorted. This stop is the hell of commodified desire, and it functions as the upper circle of Redux’s inferno. The bunnies are not seductresses; they are air-dropped promises of home, stranded and forced to barter their presence for fuel. The crew’s transaction—a canister of gas for two hours of the bunnies’ company—is transactional depravity laid bare. There is nothing refined here. The soldiers who swarm the boat are not conquering heroes; they are starving ghosts pawing at a mirage of femininity. The corruption is the commodification of intimacy, the way the war machine grinds up even fantasy into a trade good. In Dante’s Inferno, the lustful are eternally swept by winds, never at rest. Here, the winds are helicopter rotors, and no one finds peace. This stop still has energy, still has motion—it is desperate, ugly, and pathetic, but not yet defeated. It is the first circle: sin as transaction.
Further upriver, deeper into the jungle, you hit the second major stop in Redux’s order: the Do Lung Bridge. In Dante’s structure, the middle and lower circles punish the violent, the fraudulent, and the sowers of discord—those whose sins actively tear apart the fabric of order. The bridge is a sustained vision of the eighth circle—the Malebolge, the evil ditches of the fraudulent. This is the hell of absurd, endless combat, and it sits far below the bunnies’ desperate lust because it has abandoned desire altogether. The bridge is supposed to be a strategic point, but no one in command knows who is fighting whom or even which side holds which trench. Soldiers fire blindly into the dark; engineers build and rebuild sections of bridge that are destroyed every night by an invisible enemy. The wounded groan, a psychedelic light show of flares and tracers turns the sky into a flickering carnival of death, and a dazed soldier informs Willard that this place has been “crazy” for days. There is no front line, no objective, only endless, repetitive, pointless construction and destruction. The corruption here is systemic: the war has become an autopilot nightmare where violence generates nothing but more violence. Unlike the bunnies, who still want something, the soldiers at the bridge don’t even know what they are doing anymore. They simply perform the same broken task for eternity. Willard’s only reaction is a numb observation that he should inform his superiors, but he never will. The bridge is the point where any remaining belief in order or purpose dissolves into white noise. It is the second circle: sin as automation.
Then, after the bridge’s chaos, the crew drifts into the third major stop: the French rubber plantation. In Dante’s Inferno, the deepest circles before the frozen center punish heresy and treachery—sins of the intellect and will, where belief becomes a cage. The plantation functions exactly like this. It is the hell of nostalgia and colonial rot, a step deeper than the bridge’s chaos because it has calcified into ideology. After the raw transaction of the bunnies and the absurd violence of the bridge, the crew stumbles upon a walled pocket of denial. Here, the French family sips wine, argues geopolitics, and pretends the war is a tragic inconvenience rather than a total collapse. This is the hell of the static dead—people who refuse to acknowledge that their world has already ended. The rubber trees themselves, planted in neat, tyrannical rows, symbolize extractive cruelty made mundane. Willard sleeps with a widowed French woman, a moment of hollow lust that feels more like a funeral rite than passion. The corruption here is polite, intellectual, and almost seductive—but it is still decay wearing a starched shirt. Unlike the bunnies’ squalid desperation, the plantation has manners. Unlike the bridge’s chaotic noise, the plantation has quiet arguments. That makes it more insidious, and therefore deeper in the infernal funnel. This is the third circle: sin as denial.
By the time Willard finally reaches Kurtz’s compound, he has descended past all these preparatory circles into the ninth and final circle of Dante’s Inferno—Cocytus, the frozen lake of treachery, where Satan himself is trapped in ice. Kurtz is no longer a man but a fixed point of absolute darkness. His compound is a Cambodian nightmare of severed heads, pagan rituals, and whispered monologues. Unlike the bunnies’ desperate transaction, the bridge’s absurd chaos, or the plantation’s nostalgic denial, Kurtz’s hell is complete stillness. He has murdered and been worshipped for it. He has rejected every prior layer—commerce, command, colonialism—and arrived at a nihilistic truth: that horror is the only moral absolute. Willard’s task is not to understand Kurtz but to kill him, and in doing so, to become him. That is the final descent: not into fire, but into the ice of total moral withdrawal. The Redux version emphasizes this by making Kurtz more verbose but also more inert. He is trapped not by chains, but by his own unbearable clarity. The three stops before him—the bunnies, the bridge, the plantation—are all failed attempts to build meaning in the jungle. Kurtz is the place where meaning dies entirely.
What remains unchanged, across both cuts, is the technical majesty. Vittorio Storaro’s cinematography still haunts the soul. The opening shot—a napalm-blasted jungle dissolving into the slow rotation of a ceiling fan in a Saigon hotel room, with The Doors’ “The End” whispering over the soundtrack—is one of the great tone-setters in cinema history. The Redux cut luxuriates in these images even longer, letting the heat and humidity seep through the screen. The attack on a Vietnamese sampan, where an innocent family is slaughtered in a burst of trigger-happy panic, remains devastating. Laurence Fishburne’s young, wide-eyed Clean, Dennis Hopper’s jittery, sycophantic photojournalist (a role that feels like pure id), and Robert Duvall’s iconic Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore, who loves the smell of napalm in the morning, all deliver performances that feel less like acting and more like channeling. Duvall’s surf-obsessed madman is even more absurdly perfect in Redux because the added length makes his brief screentime feel like a welcome blast of cold air before the suffocating final act.
Which brings us back to Marlon Brando as Kurtz. Here is where Redux both helps and hurts. The theatrical cut gives Kurtz a mythic, almost abstract presence—shadowy, whispering, half-sculpted. Brando showed up overweight and unprepared, so Coppola shot him mostly in shadow. In Redux, those shadows remain, but the added material includes a longer, more discursive monologue where Kurtz reads from a Time magazine article about the war and rambles about the horror of administering lethal injections to polio-stricken villagers. It is more Brando, which is never nothing, but it also demystifies the monster. The terror of Kurtz in the original cut is that he is an idea, a reflection of Willard’s own potential. In Redux, he becomes a sweaty, slightly boring philosopher. The famous “the horror, the horror” death scene still lands, but getting there feels like you have already been swimming in his rhetoric for too long. The added footage makes Kurtz more human but less terrifying, which may or may not be an improvement depending on your tolerance for Brando’s mumbling.
The casual viewer might find Redux interminable. Let’s be honest: three and a half hours of madness, helicopters, and nihilism is a lot. There are stretches in the plantation sequence where you might check your phone. The pacing is deliberately, almost arrogantly slow. Coppola is not trying to entertain you; he is trying to drown you. And in those moments of slog—when the French family drones on about geopolitics, when the bunnies’ desperation overstays its welcome, when the bridge’s chaos becomes repetitive rather than shocking—you might be tempted to declare the whole Redux experiment a failure. But here is the uncomfortable truth that separates Apocalypse Now Redux from mere indulgent director’s cuts: the film’s occasional sluggishness, its bloated digressions, its refusal to maintain a clean narrative spine, are not flaws so much as they are the correct representation of the very thing the film’s themes and narrative ideas were trying to explore. This is a movie about a journey into moral rot, about the collapse of linear purpose into circular nightmare, about men who have stared too long into the abyss and lost the ability to tell a clean story. Why should the film itself be clean? The theatrical cut is a masterpiece of compression, yes—but compression is an act of control, and Apocalypse Now is ultimately about the loss of control. The Redux version, for all its unevenness, is the more honest artifact because it refuses to polish the madness into neat dramatic beats. The original film is a nightmare you cannot wake from; Redux is the insomnia that precedes it, the sweaty, bored, terrifying awareness that there is no ending, only more jungle.
This is why, despite its longer running time and the areas where the pacing sometimes slogs through, the film overall succeeds as not just a fever dream of the filmmaker, writers, and actors who survived its legendary production—the typhoons, the heart attacks, Brando’s chaos, Sheen’s breakdown—but as the correct representation of the very thing the film’s themes and narrative ideas were trying to explore. Apocalypse Now is about the impossibility of remaining sane in an insane environment. The Redux cut, by refusing to be efficiently sane, becomes a more immersive simulation of that condition. The theatrical cut tells you about the horror; the Redux cut makes you live inside its tedious, exhausting, occasionally boring reality. And boredom is part of horror, too—the long stretches between atrocities, the waiting, the pointless arguments, the nights that won’t end. Coppola, Milius, Sheen, Brando, and everyone else who survived the Philippines shoot did not emerge with a clean story. They emerged with scars, footage, and a kind of shell-shocked awe. The Redux version honors that survival by refusing to pretend the experience was anything other than a mess. It is the director’s cut as wound, not as polish.
For the obsessive, for those who want to see the entire messy, unfinished vision behind one of the great artistic catastrophes (the documentary Hearts of Darkness is essential companion viewing), Redux is invaluable. It reveals that the original 1979 cut was a miracle of editing—a salvage job that turned a troubled production into a masterpiece. Redux is the rough draft of that miracle. It has a bloated, novelistic quality, more concerned with atmosphere than narrative efficiency. As a loose adaptation of Heart of Darkness, it is oddly more faithful than the original cut—because Conrad’s novella is also meandering, digressive, and filled with colonial asides that do not advance the plot. But faithfulness is not the same as greatness.
The Redux version is a flawed, overstuffed, hypnotic masterpiece that sometimes trips over its own ambition. It earns its runtime not through tight storytelling, but through sheer, oppressive mood. And in the end, that is the point. You are not supposed to leave Apocalypse Now feeling satisfied. You are supposed to leave feeling like you have stared into something ancient and ugly. The Redux version just makes you stare longer, dragging you down through each Dantesque circle—from the desperate, transactional depravity of the Playboy bunnies, through the absurd, autopilot chaos of the Do Lung Bridge, past the polite, rotting nostalgia of the French plantation, and finally into the frozen stillness of Kurtz’s compound—until there is nothing left but the ice and the horror. And in those moments when the film slows to a crawl, when you check your watch and wonder why we are still at the plantation, that is not a failure of art. That is the art itself, reminding you that hell is not a nonstop carnival of screams. Hell is also a long, boring dinner with people who refuse to die. Whether that is luxury or punishment is for you to decide. But Apocalypse Now Redux succeeds precisely because it trusts you to sit with that discomfort and recognize it for what it is: the truth.
“The mind of man is capable of anything.” — Charles Marlow
There’s a strange, magnetic pull to Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness that keeps readers coming back, even when the book itself seems determined to repel you. Published in 1899, this novella is often taught as a classic of colonial critique, but spending time with it feels less like a lecture and more like a slow, feverish drift up a murky river. The plot is deceptively simple: a British sailor named Marlow takes a job piloting a steamboat for an ivory trading company in the Belgian Congo. His real mission, however, is to find Kurtz, a charismatic, brilliant agent who has supposedly gone mad and set himself up as a god among the natives. What Marlow finds instead is a hollow man whose final whisper—“The horror! The horror!”—becomes one of literature’s most chilling epitaphs.
Conrad’s prose is dense and atmospheric, almost claustrophobic. He writes in long, looping sentences that circle back on themselves, mimicking the tangled jungle and Marlow’s own spiraling psyche. You don’t read this novella so much as wade through it, feeling the heat, the flies, and the creeping sense of moral decay. The frame narrative—Marlow telling his story to a group of sailors on the Thames—adds a layer of ironic distance. London, the heart of empire, is presented as another kind of darkness, a civilized wilderness that has simply learned to hide its savagery behind suits and ledgers. This structural choice is brilliant because it forces you to ask: is the “darkness” really in Africa, or is it something Europe shipped downriver?
That said, any honest review has to address the elephant in the room: the book’s treatment of race. For decades, the Nigerian writer and critic Chinua Achebe has mounted the most devastating case against Heart of Darkness. In his landmark 1975 lecture “An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness,” Achebe argues that Conrad, despite ostensibly critiquing Belgian colonialism, produced a work that is fundamentally racist—a piece of literature born directly from the imperial colonial era and its dehumanizing ideologies. Achebe’s point is sharp and uncomfortable: the novella seeks to expose the dangers and horrors of imperialism, yet it simultaneously perpetuates the very racist ideas it should be dismantling. Conrad denies nearly every African character a name, a voice, or an interior life. They appear as limbs, grunts, or “savages” performing ominous rituals on the shore. Africa itself is reduced to “a place of darkness,” “the prehistoric earth,” and a blank space on the map waiting for European meaning. The sole exception is a well-dressed native man who works as a cook—and even he is reduced to a clumsy, almost comic figure. Marlow is more disturbed by the sight of “improper” cannibals restraining themselves than he is by the company’s brutal exploitation.
Achebe’s critique cuts to the bone: Conrad may have hated the cruelty of colonialism, but he couldn’t imagine Africans as fully human. He traded one set of stereotypes for another, offering a critique of empire that remains trapped inside empire’s own racial logic. You can argue that Conrad is exposing racism by showing Marlow’s limited perspective, but the text gives us no alternative viewpoint. The Congolese remain scenery for a white man’s existential crisis. That’s not just dated; it’s a structural flaw that makes the book feel less like a universal tragedy and more like a monologue delivered in a vacuum—and, as Achebe famously wrote, “a book which parades in the most vulgar fashion prejudices and insults from which a section of mankind has suffered untold agonies and atrocities should not be called a great work of art.” So while the novella wants to critique colonial violence, it cannot see the violence of its own representational strategies. The very language Conrad uses to evoke horror—the “savage” drums, the “prehistoric” shores—ends up reinforcing the racist hierarchies he pretends to question. Overt insults mix with subtle, almost unconscious dehumanization, creating a text that is as morally compromised as the ivory traders it condemns.
Where Heart of Darkness still stings is in its psychological precision, even as Achebe’s critique complicates any easy admiration. Kurtz is a masterpiece of ambiguity: a poet, a painter, a journalist who wrote a report on “civilizing” the natives, only to scribble at the bottom, “Exterminate all the brutes!” He represents the lie at the core of imperialism—the idea that Europe brings light to darkness, when in fact it brings greed, violence, and an insatiable hunger for ivory. The novella’s real horror isn’t the jungle or the cannibals; it’s how easily a man with noble ideals can become a skull-decorating tyrant. Conrad, who himself worked in the Congo, understood that the heart of darkness is not a place but a capacity we all carry. Yet Achebe would counter that this “we” is tellingly selective—the capacity for darkness is explored in Kurtz and Marlow, while actual African people are merely the backdrop against which that darkness is measured.
Despite its flaws—or perhaps because of their uncomfortable rawness—Heart of Darkness has proven enormously influential since its publication. Its DNA can be found in everything from T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (which originally quoted Kurtz’s “horror” as an epigraph) to Werner Herzog’s Aguirre, the Wrath of God. But the best and most famous example is Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 film Apocalypse Now, which transplants the story from colonial Congo to the Vietnam War. Captain Willard stands in for Marlow, and the rogue Colonel Kurtz (famously played by Marlon Brando) becomes the ivory trader’s spiritual twin—a decorated American operative who has set up his own brutal kingdom in the Cambodian jungle. Coppola keeps Conrad’s core structure: a river journey into madness, a whispered report on “unsound methods,” and a final, intimate confrontation with a man who has seen too much. What makes Apocalypse Now such a brilliant adaptation is that it doesn’t just copy the plot; it captures the feverish, hallucinatory tone. The film’s famous line—“I love the smell of napalm in the morning”—echoes Kurtz’s seductive, terrifying embrace of violence. By updating the setting, Coppola proved that Heart of Darkness was never really about the Congo. It was about the darkness any empire carries inside itself. Yet even here, Achebe’s shadow lingers: the film, like the novella, largely sidelines the Vietnamese and Cambodian people, turning them into anonymous threats or scenery for an American psychodrama.
So, is this a book you should read? Yes, but with caution and critical awareness. It’s short—under 40,000 words—but it’s not an easy afternoon’s entertainment. Read it alongside Achebe’s essay “An Image of Africa” or a historical account of Leopold II’s atrocities. Treat Marlow as an unreliable narrator, not a prophet, and recognize that Conrad’s attempt to critique empire is fatally compromised by the very racial imagination he never managed to escape. The prose can be maddeningly vague, and the pacing sometimes stalls under the weight of its own symbolism. Yet for all its flaws, Heart of Darkness refuses to fade away, in part because artists from Conrad to Coppola keep finding new horrors to pour into its shape, and in part because critics like Achebe force us to read it honestly—as both a searing study of evil and an uncomfortable document of that same evil’s persistence. It’s a mirror held up to the worst of us, and whether you see a portrait of colonialism, a study of madness, a racist artifact, or all three at once, you won’t forget what stares back.
As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in a few weekly live tweets on Twitter and Mastodon. I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie! Every week, we get together. We watch a movie. We tweet our way through it.
Tonight, at 10 pm et, #ScarySocial presents 1966’s Kill, Baby, Kill,, directed by Mario Bava!
If you want to join us this Saturday, just hop onto twitter, start the movie at 10 pm et, and use the #ScarySocial hashtag! It’s a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy.
Kill, Baby, Kill is available on Prime! See you there!
Shaq, rap superstar! It’s a thing that happened. Briefly.
While Shaq’s rap career didn’t exactly set the world on fire and his attempts at film stardom didn’t go much better, he was fortunate enough to have another career to fall back on.
At least now you know what Shaq and the General are listening to while they’re driving around the country and telling people about car insurance.
Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Fridays, I will be reviewing St. Elsewhere, a medical show which ran on NBC from 1982 to 1988. The show can be found on Daily Motion.
The drama continues in Boston.
Episode 3.20 “Amazing Face”
(Dir by Janet Greek, originally aired on February 20th, 1985)
This week, at St. Eligius:
Nurse Rosenthal thinks that she’s pregnant. That sound you hear is me sighing. Seriously, I liked Nurse Rosenthal during the first season but now I’m kind of sick of her and her sanctimonious attitude, her homewrecking affair with Richard, and her annoying children. Obviously, the show’s writers really liked Nurse Rosenthal but I’m tired of her. A pregnant Nurse Rosenthal? I don’t think I could handle that. Fortunately, it turns out that Nurse Rosenthal is actually starting menopause.
When is Rosenthal going to dump Richard? We all know it’s going to happen.
Dr. Westphall has put his house on the market and boy, is he glum about it. Westphall continues to be the most depressing human being on the planet.
Mrs. Hufnagle has heart surgery. Before that, however, she steals some scrubs and wanders in on an operation.
Fiscus wants to hook back up with Cathy Martin. When a macho patient makes a misogynistic comment about Cathy, Fiscus throws a punch and gets his ass kicked. Luckily, Cathy has learned kung fu.
The bandages are removed and Andrea Fordham (Ann Hearn) sees her new face. She now looks like an average teenager. She tells Dr. Caldwell that she’s still not ready to face the world.
Shirley Daniels is a patient at St. Eligius. She tells everyone who she meets that she killed Peter White and that she can’t wait to go to jail for it. She promises Doctors Wade and Morrison that she’ll never shoot anyone else. She also reveals that she’s the one who sent the baby ski mask to Peter’s widow. She’s knitting a new ski mask for Morrison’s son. Oh, Shirley!
The episode ends with Shirley going to the morgue and flashing back to the time she shot Peter in the testicles.
Considering all the hospitals in Boston, was it really a good idea for her to stay at the same one where she happened to kill a doctor, albeit one who deserved exactly what he got?
This episode felt like filler. Ehrlich acted like a jackass. Morrison acted like he had the weight of the world on his shoulders. Dr. Craig was arrogant. Dr. Westphall was depressed. It wasn’t a bad episode but there wasn’t anything terribly memorable about it either.
“It’s what people know about themselves inside that makes ’em afraid.” — The Stranger
Mythic Outsiders and the Shape of the Stranger
Clint Eastwood’s High Plains Drifter and Pale Rider both revolve around the arrival of a mysterious outsider whose presence destabilizes and reconfigures a frontier community already burdened by moral pressure, economic vulnerability, or buried violence. In High Plains Drifter, the Stranger arrives with the weight of something closer to metaphysical judgment than human intention. He is introduced not as a conventional protagonist but as an unsettling disruption of reality itself, a figure who seems to exist slightly outside the normal rules governing cause and consequence. His relationship to the town of Lago is immediately adversarial, but not in a personal sense—it is structural, almost cosmic, as though he is less reacting to the town than fulfilling a prewritten moral outcome.
By contrast, Pale Rider preserves the same narrative skeleton but shifts the emotional and moral emphasis toward intervention rather than judgment. The Preacher still carries ambiguity—his scars, his sudden appearance, and his almost supernatural timing all suggest something beyond ordinary human agency—but his role is fundamentally protective. He enters a world defined by industrial pressure and economic coercion rather than buried collective sin, and his presence functions as a counterweight to imbalance rather than an execution of moral sentence. The result is that both films feel like variations of the same mythic story, but one is written as condemnation while the other reads as reluctant guardianship.
Old Testament Retribution vs. Folkloric Myth
One of the most revealing ways to distinguish the two films is through their mythic grammar. High Plains Drifter reads like an Old Testament narrative of retribution, where morality is absolute, guilt is inherited collectively, and punishment is not only justified but structurally inevitable. The Stranger operates like a figure of divine wrath, not because he explicitly claims divine authority, but because the world of the film behaves as though such authority is implicit. Lago is not a community undergoing moral testing; it is a community already judged. Every act the Stranger commits feels like the unfolding of a sentence that predates his arrival. Violence in this framework is not expressive or emotional—it is procedural, almost liturgical, as though the town is being dismantled according to a moral code that does not permit negotiation.
The Old Testament quality of High Plains Drifter is also evident in its treatment of time and consequence. The past is not past—it is active, invasive, and inescapable. The town’s buried crime against its former marshal is not simply a backstory element; it functions as a theological stain that structures everything that follows. The Stranger does not introduce justice into the world; he reveals that justice was already waiting, dormant and inevitable.
Pale Rider, by contrast, operates within a folkloric mode that feels less doctrinal and more narrative in the oral-tradition sense. The Preacher is not a judge delivering sentence but a figure who appears within a story because the story requires balance. Folklore does not insist on moral finality in the same way scripture does; instead, it preserves ambiguity, repetition, and interpretive openness. The Preacher’s identity remains unresolved not because the film withholds information, but because resolution itself is not the point. He resembles figures from frontier legend—wandering spirits, unnamed avengers, or protective ghosts whose purpose is understood only through their effects on a community rather than through explicit explanation.
Where High Plains Drifter insists on inevitability, Pale Rider allows for contingency. The Preacher arrives in response to suffering rather than in fulfillment of punishment. His presence suggests that moral intervention is episodic rather than absolute, something that occurs when imbalance becomes intolerable rather than something decreed in advance. The result is a world that feels open-ended rather than sealed.
Moral Worlds: Guilt Versus Vulnerability
The moral architecture of each film is constructed through the condition of its community. In High Plains Drifter, Lago is defined by collective guilt so pervasive that it erases meaningful individuality. The townspeople are not simply flawed characters; they are components of a shared moral collapse. Their original crime—the betrayal and murder of their marshal—functions as the foundation of their identity. The Stranger’s arrival does not introduce new moral tension; it activates an existing one that has been suppressed but never resolved. The town’s psychology is therefore circular: guilt produces fear, fear produces complicity, and complicity guarantees punishment.
This circularity is what gives High Plains Drifter its claustrophobic quality. There is no outside moral perspective capable of altering the town’s fate. Even resistance or survival strategies feel complicit in the same moral structure. The town is effectively trapped inside its own ethical architecture.
In Pale Rider, however, the mining community is framed through vulnerability rather than guilt. These characters are not haunted by a collective sin but threatened by external forces—specifically Coy LaHood’s industrial expansion, which seeks to displace them through economic pressure and intimidation. The moral stakes are therefore asymmetrical: a powerful industrial entity versus a fragile group of independent miners. This reframing is crucial because it transforms the Preacher’s role from agent of punishment to agent of protection. He does not expose corruption within the miners; he resists corruption directed toward them.
Tone and Philosophical Direction
The tonal difference between the films reflects Eastwood’s evolving relationship with the Western mythos. High Plains Drifter is austere, surreal, and deliberately disorienting. The town of Lago feels less like a historical location than a moral construct, a space designed to contain judgment. The visual and narrative isolation of the town reinforces its status as a closed system, one in which moral consequence operates without interference from broader social or geographic context. The result is a film that feels almost metaphysical in its severity, as though it is staging a moral experiment rather than telling a grounded story.
Violence in this context becomes an instrument of revelation. Each act performed by the Stranger peels back layers of denial and self-deception, leaving only the raw structure of guilt beneath. The tone is not merely dark—it is stripping, reductive, and final.
Pale Rider, while still restrained and often somber, introduces a more grounded emotional texture. The mining settlement feels materially real, shaped by labor, scarcity, and interpersonal bonds. This grounding prevents the film from collapsing into abstraction. Even when supernatural ambiguity is present, it is embedded within a world that feels historically and physically tangible. This creates a tonal tension between myth and realism that softens the absolutism found in High Plains Drifter. Instead of moral vacuum, Pale Rider offers moral friction.
The Outsider as Moral Force
Eastwood’s performances in both films embody the evolution of the outsider archetype. In High Plains Drifter, the Stranger is almost entirely detached from human relatability. His silence is not contemplative but destabilizing, creating unease in every interaction. He functions like a moral solvent, dissolving social bonds and exposing hidden structures of guilt. There is no suggestion that he belongs to the world he enters; instead, he appears to impose a structure upon it.
In Pale Rider, the Preacher retains the same controlled economy of expression, but his presence is tempered by moments of relational meaning. His connection to the miners, particularly the young girl whose prayer summons him, introduces a reciprocal dimension absent from High Plains Drifter. He is not simply an external force acting upon the world; he is a figure whose arrival is framed as response. This responsiveness is what aligns him more closely with folkloric tradition, where characters are defined not by origin but by function within a narrative ecosystem.
Violence as Judgment vs. Necessity
Violence in High Plains Drifter operates as moral inevitability. It is structured, ritualized, and unavoidably recursive. Each act feels like the continuation of a moral sequence already underway, as though the Stranger is simply advancing toward a predetermined conclusion. The emotional effect is one of inevitability without catharsis.
In Pale Rider, violence is repositioned as necessity rather than inevitability. It emerges only when economic exploitation and coercion leave no viable alternatives. This reframing is subtle but significant: violence becomes situational rather than cosmic. The Preacher does not embody judgment; he responds to imbalance. As a result, even the film’s climactic confrontations carry a different emotional charge—they feel like interruptions in injustice rather than fulfillments of destiny.
Supporting Communities and Narrative Focus
Both films maintain a strong central focus on Eastwood’s outsider, which inevitably limits the depth of supporting character development. However, the implications of this limitation differ between them. In High Plains Drifter, the flattening of the townspeople reinforces the idea of collective moral identity. Individual psychology is irrelevant because the town functions as a single ethical organism. The lack of distinction between characters serves the film’s allegorical purpose.
In Pale Rider, the miners are more individualized in performance even if not fully developed in script. Actors such as Michael Moriarty and Carrie Snodgress bring emotional specificity that suggests lives extending beyond the frame. This helps ground the film’s mythic structure in human stakes, preventing it from becoming purely symbolic. Even if the characters are archetypal, they are not abstract.
Visual Mythmaking
Cinematographically, the two films articulate their mythic identities through environment. High Plains Drifter constructs a space that feels artificially isolated, as though removed from ordinary geography and placed into a moral void. The town becomes a sealed chamber in which ethical consequences unfold without external interference. This abstraction reinforces its Old Testament quality: a world governed by decree.
Pale Rider, shot by Bruce Surtees, leans into environmental tactility. The forests, mountains, and mining encampments feel embedded in a larger natural system. This grounding creates a sense of narrative openness. Rather than existing as a moral stage, the landscape feels like a lived world in which myth temporarily emerges before receding again into ordinary life. This is essential to its folkloric tone.
Conclusion: Two Mythic Languages of the Western
Ultimately, High Plains Drifter and Pale Rider function as two distinct mythic languages within Clint Eastwood’s evolving critique of the Western. One articulates itself through Old Testament logic—absolute judgment, collective guilt, and irreversible consequence. The other speaks in folkloric terms—episodic intervention, narrative ambiguity, and moral imbalance temporarily corrected rather than permanently resolved. Together, they form a sustained meditation on the Western outsider as both executioner and legend: one who arrives to complete a sentence already written, and another who arrives like a story that briefly becomes real before fading back into myth.
As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in a few weekly watch parties. On Twitter, I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday and I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday. On Mastodon, I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie! Every week, we get together. We watch a movie. We tweet our way through it.
Tonight, at 10 pm et, I will be hosting #FridayNightFlix! The movie? 1975’s Dolemite!
If you want to join us this Friday, just hop onto twitter, find Dolemite on Prime, start the movie at 10 pm et, and use the #FridayNightFlix hashtag! I’ll be there happily tweeting. It’s a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy.
Since today is John Glen’s birthday, it only seems appropriate that today’s song of the day should be one of my favorite James Bond themes. From the underrated Octopussy, here’s one of the few songs that I can sing (though I don’t sound anywhere near as good as Rita Coolidge), All Time High!
All I wanted was a sweet distraction for an hour or two Had no intention to do the things we’ve done Funny how it always goes with love, when you don’t look, you find But then we’re two of a kind, we move as one
We’re an all-time high We’ll change all that’s gone before Doing so much more than falling in love On an all-time high We’ll take on the world and win So hold on tight, let the flight begin
I don’t want to waste a waking moment, I don’t want to sleep I’m in so strong and so deep, and so are you In my time, I’ve said these words before, but now I realize My heart was telling me lies, for you, they’re true
We’re an all-time high We’ll change all that’s gone before Doing so much more than falling in love On an all-time high We’ll take on the world and win So hold on tight, let the flight begin
So hold on tight, let the flight begin We’re an all-time high