DVD Review
Hell or High Water
Directed by David Mackenzie

Cops and robbers

DAVID MACKENZIE鈥橲 Hell or High Water, from a script by Taylor Sheridan (Sicario) turns on a terrifically compelling premise: that brothers Toby and Tanner Howard (Chris Pine and Ben Foster, respectively) are so financially threatened by the reverse mortgage loan lent to them by a bank 鈥 the fictional Texas Midlands 鈥 for their recently deceased mother鈥檚 treatment that they鈥檝e taken to carefully robbing that same bank鈥檚 smaller branches (teller鈥檚 drawers not vault, no bundles, no large bills) to repay the loan.

It鈥檚 a clever idea with a sense of perverse justice one can鈥檛 help but admire. Add to the mix a pair of perversely winning Texas Rangers in some kind of pursuit: Mexican-Native American Alberto Paker (Gil Birmingham) and One-Case-Short-of-Retirement Marcus Hamilton (Jeff Bridges). Marcus can鈥檛 help needling Alberto for his ethnicity: 鈥淚鈥檒l get to the Mexican insults after I鈥檝e finished with the Indian ones. But it鈥檒l be a while.鈥 Alberto counters with semi-effective ripostes (鈥淢aybe one of these bank robbers is gonna want a gunfight and I can dodge my retirement in a blaze of glory,鈥 鈥淲ell I鈥檝e seen you shoot; there won鈥檛 be much glory in it鈥). It鈥檚 all hostile and politically incorrect on the surface but Birmingham only occasionally registers genuine annoyance 鈥 in the same manner as an old married couple, and significantly when they鈥檙e sharing a bed 鈥 and Bridges delivers his jabs with enough charm you can believe (if you want to) that Alberto would take the abuse (though not much more). Their scenes together skirt the border between daring and unacceptable, skating occasionally across the line and back.

Marcus is the behavioral analyst of the pair 鈥 he鈥檚 sussed out the brothers鈥 motives, narrowing their next targeted branches to one or two possibilities; of the criminals Toby is the thinker who鈥檚 come up with their scheme, with Tanner along to add some wild to the ride. The four crisscross a vividly conceived West Texas, all vast plains and rusted barbed wire, junked cars and empty streets lined with shuttered businesses. Mackenzie grew up in Scotland but brings an outsider鈥檚 aestheticizing eye to the economic desolation; in his juxtaposition of forlorn figures standing against foreclosed properties he visually sums up the sullen anger smouldering in rural American.

MISSING THE BIG PICTURE
Where the film falters is in Taylor Sheridan鈥檚 script which (as in his previous work) gets the details wonderfully right but misses on the big picture. My biggest problem with Sicario wasn鈥檛 the details (the mutilated hanging bodies, the legal thinking behind recruiting Emily Blunt鈥檚 FBI agent) but overall plausibility; as Sheridan himself admits military interventions don鈥檛 really work, and it鈥檚 hard to believe given the evidence of recent years (the killing of Bin Laden being a significant exception) that the CIA is all that effective, or that the overall strategy will succeed in the long run. Sheridan tries to adopt the tactic Orson Welles used in his classic noir Touch of Evil (also about border towns, also about drugs) of making the morally corrupt figure (Alejandro Gillick (Benicio del Toro) in Sicario, Hank Quinlan (Welles) in Touch) more compelling but makes the mistake of focusing almost exclusively on the upright law enforcer (Kate Macer (Blunt) in the former, Miguel Vargas (Charlton Heston) in the latter). The end product is an outsider鈥檚 view that doesn鈥檛 give us the full tragic arc of the film鈥檚 most interesting character.

Cops and robbers

So it goes with Hell or High Water. Sheridan does good work; his premise is crackerjack ingenious, his characters talk and behave as if they鈥檇 lounged in rickety rocking chairs and drove secondhand pickup trucks all their lives, with enough willfulness and peppery life in them to crack the calcification encrusting the stereotypes: Katy Mixon鈥檚 Jenny Ann is a rich slice of soft-spoken humanity 鈥 rich enough to touch something in the taciturn Toby 鈥 that turns steely defiant when confronting Bridges鈥 grizzled Ranger; Margaret Bowman鈥檚 seen-it-all waitress (鈥渟o what don鈥檛 you want?鈥) isn鈥檛 as layered but spikes her one brief scene with Marcus and Alberto with such emphatic energy you (and I suspect the two actors) want to give her a standing ovation. Combined with Mackenzie鈥檚 expansive yet mournful images (cinematography by Giles Nutgens, whose lyrical work with Deepa Mehta is easily the best single element in her films) and you have a potent brew of a picture, the kind of smoky white lightning you sip carefully out of a cracked jug while lounging on a hot afternoon porch.

NAGGING FALSITY
And yet again there鈥檚 a nagging falsity to the film鈥檚 overall scheme. Partly it鈥檚 Sheridan鈥檚 insistence on overexplicating what Mackenzie so eloquently visualizes 鈥 that the banks are part of the propertied establishment that townsfolk have sullenly resented for years (with Alberto making the amused aside that this was where the red man had stood with regards to the white man for the past few hundred of those years), that the Howards鈥 felonies are payback and the brothers a kind of champion of the working poor. Doesn鈥檛 help that Pine is cast as the more presentable brother (Thoughtful, intelligent and good looking?); switch the two actors鈥 roles in your head 鈥 pretty Pine as the violent hothead and Foster as the thoughtful tactician 鈥 and see if the film doesn鈥檛 sound more interesting.

The ending (skip the rest of this paragraph if you plan to see the film!) has Marcus and Toby in quiet conversation; Sheridan does a nice job of writing dialogue (delivered in understated manner by the actors) that glows with low-level menace; all that said, Pine鈥檚 Toby does earn a free pass 鈥 he鈥檚 rich (or at least his family is), he鈥檚 free and clear of any criminal liability, he isn鈥檛 even all that morally culpable (it鈥檚 his brother that initiated the climactic firefight). Welles鈥 film 鈥 arguably the last and greatest of the true noirs 鈥 tells through the title alone (a touch not a hammer blow) that no one comes away clean in the presence of corruption, that we鈥檙e all to some degree contaminated, that our full reckoning may be much delayed but never entirely dismissed. One of the better films of the year, if not exactly the best.