Pale Rider

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Pale Rider

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Clint Eastwood
Produced by Clint Eastwood
Written by Michael Butler
Dennis Shryack
Starring Clint Eastwood
Michael Moriarty
Carrie Snodgress
Music by Lennie Niehaus
Cinematography Bruce Surtees
Editing by Joel Cox
Studio The Malpaso Company
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
  • June 26, 1985 (1985-06-26)
Running time 116 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6.9 million[1]
Box office $41,410,568[2]

Pale Rider is a 1985 American western film produced and directed by Clint Eastwood, who also stars in the lead role. This movie bears a striking similarity to the classic Western Shane, as well as similarities to Eastwood's earlier film High Plains Drifter. The title is a reference to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, as the rider of a pale horse is Death.

Plot

The film opens in the countryside outside the fictional town of Lahood, California, and takes place sometime in the 1880s (based on remarks in the film about outlawing hydraulic mining). Thugs working for big-time miner Coy LaHood ride in and destroy the camp of a group of struggling miners and their families who have settled in nearby Carbon Canyon and are panning for gold there. In leaving, they also shoot the little dog of 14-year old Megan Wheeler. As Megan buries it in the woods and prays for a miracle, we see a stranger heading to the town on horseback.

Megan's mother, Sarah, is keeping company with Hull Barret, the leader of the miners. Hull heads off into town to pick up supplies, where the same thugs start to beat him up and he is rescued by the stranger, who takes the men on single handed. Hull invites him to his house where, after washing, he appears wearing a clerical collar and thereafter is called Preacher.

Coy LaHood's son Josh attempts to scare Preacher with a show of strength from his giant work hand, Club, who with one hammer blow smashes a large rock that Preacher and Hull had been laboring over. When Club attempts to attack Preacher, he hits him in the face with his hammer and delivers a blow to Club's groin. Coy LaHood has been away in Sacramento and is furious to learn about Preacher’s arrival through his son, since this will stiffen the resistance of the tin panners. Having failed to bribe him to settle in the town instead, LaHood offers to buy the miners out at $1,000 per claim, but only if they leave within 24 hours; otherwise LaHood threatens to hire a corrupt Marshal named Stockburn to clear them out.

The miners initially want to take the offer but, when Hull reminds them why they came and what they have sacrificed, they decide to stay and fight. The next morning, however, the Preacher disappears. Megan, who has grown fond of the Preacher, heads out looking for him, but Josh captures and attempts to rape her. Club sees what is happening and moves forward to help her before Josh can do anything serious. At this moment the Preacher arrives on horseback armed with a revolver he has recovered from a Wells Fargo office and, after shooting Josh in the hand when he goes for his gun, takes Megan back to her mother in the mining camp.

Stockburn arrives at the town and he and his men gun down Spider, one of the miners, who was drunkenly insulting LaHood from the street. LaHood describes the Preacher to Stockburn, who says that he sounds like someone that he once knew, but that he couldn't be, since that man is dead.

Preacher teams up with Hull and they go to LaHood's strip mining site and blow it up with dynamite. To stop Hull from following him, Preacher then scares off Hull's horse and rides into town alone. In the gun fight that follows he kills all but two of Coy's thugs and then, one by one, Stockburn’s men as they hunt for him through the town. Finally he shoots it out with Stockburn too who recognizes him in disbelief. Coy LaHood, watching from his office, aims a rifle at Preacher, only to be killed by Hull coming in through a back door.

Preacher rides his horse out of a barn and by way of thanks remarks to Hull "Long walk" before riding off into the snow covered mountains. Megan then drives into town and shouts her thanks after him. The words echo along the ravine that he is traversing.

Cast

Clint Eastwood as "Preacher"

Production

Pale Rider was primarily filmed in the Boulder Mountains and the Sawtooth National Recreation Area in central Idaho, just north of Sun Valley in late 1984. The opening credits scene featured the jagged Sawtooth Mountains south of Stanley. Train-station scenes were filmed in Tuolumne County, California, near Jamestown. Scenes of a more established Gold Rush town (in which Eastwood's character picks up his pistol at a Wells Fargo office) were filmed in the real Gold Rush town of Columbia, also in Tuolumne County, California.[3]

Religious themes

In an audio interview, Clint Eastwood said that his character Preacher "is an out-and-out ghost".[4] But whereas High Plains Drifter resolves its story-line by means of a series of unfolding flash back narratives (although ambiguity still remains), Pale Rider does not include any such obvious clues to the nature and past of the 'Preacher'. One is left to draw one's own conclusions regarding the overall story line and its meaning.

The movie's title is taken from The Book of Revelation, chapter 6, verse 8: "And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him." The reading of the biblical passage describing this character is neatly choreographed to correspond with the sudden appearance of the Preacher, who arrived as a result of a prayer from Megan, in which she quoted Psalm 23. Preacher's comment after beating one of the villains is, "Well, the Lord certainly does work in mysterious ways." After the temptation to shift his ministry to the town, Preacher says, "You can't serve God and Mammon, Mammon being money."[5] Eastwood himself has acknowledged that the film contains a great number of biblical parallels. According to Robert Jewett the film's dialogue parallels Paul's teaching on divine retribution (Romans 12:19-21).[5]

Similarities to "Shane"

The plot contains uncanny similarities to the 1953 film Shane. Both films center around a community of laborers united against a gang of crooked entrepreneurs trying to control and take advantage of them. In both, a stranger suddenly appears whom no one knows, but who is an experienced gunfighter and sympathizes with the townspeople against the gang. In both, the protagonist's child idolizes the stranger, and his wife is attracted to him. In both, the gang kills a member of the community who confronts them; and, the stranger ultimately avenges the town. In both, the stranger rides off with the child calling after him.

Reception

Pale Rider was released in the United States in June 1985, and became the highest grossing western of the 1980s.[6] It was the first mainstream Hollywood western to be produced after the massive financial failure of Heaven's Gate. The film received positive reviews, and currently holds a 92% score on Rotten Tomatoes. Roger Ebert praised the film, giving it four out of four stars.[7]

The movie was a success at the North American box office, grossing $41,410,568[8] against a $6,900,000 budget.[9][10]

The film was entered into the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.[6][11]

References

Notes
  1. Box Office Information for Pale Rider. The Wrap. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  2. Box Office Information for Pale Rider. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  3. Hughes, p.36
  4. "Clint Eastwood.net Filmography / Pale Rider". Retrieved 2008-02-12. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Clive Marsh, Gaye Ortiz, Explorations in theology and film: movies and meaning, Blackwell Publishers 1997 (reprint 2001), p. 68
  6. 6.0 6.1 Hughes, p.38
  7. "Pale Rider", Roger Ebert, June 28, 1985.
  8. "Pale Rider (1985)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved September 21, 2010. 
  9. "Pale Rider movie info". Mooviees!. Retrieved September 21, 2010. 
  10. "Disasters Outnumber Movie Hits". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 2012-06-05. 
  11. "Festival de Cannes: Pale Rider". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-06-28. 
Bibliography
  • Hughes, Howard (2009). Aim for the Heart. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-902-7. 

External links

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