Sisters Brothers, The (2019) [Blu-ray]
Adventure | Comedy | Crime | Drama | Western
Tagline: Make a killing. Make a living.
In this darkly comic Western set in the 1850s, two hit man brothers are tasked with hunting down and killing gold prospector Hermann Kermit Warm, who stole from their boss. But along the way, the siblings find their bond put to the test.
Storyline: Based on Patrick DeWitt's novel, The Sisters Brothers revolves around the colorfully named gold prospector Hermann Kermit Warm, who's being pursued across 1000 miles of 1850s Oregon desert to San Francisco by the
notorious assassins Eli and Charlie Sisters. Except Eli is having a personal crisis and beginning to doubt the longevity of his chosen career. And Hermann might have a better offer. Written by Polly_Kat
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, February 6, 2019 How can you not like a film that owes at least part of its genesis to a series of Time-Life Books? If you're anything like me (which you understandably may not want
to admit), it's well nigh impossible. As I maybe only somewhat sheepishly disclosed in our Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Concerts Blu- ray review, I am a Time-Life junkie of sorts, having scooped up both books and recordings issued by the once venerable
publishing firm since I was a kid, and admittedly being just a tad obsessive compulsive about managing to aggregate "complete collections" of any given set. I never did go for Time-Life's Old West set of volumes, however, and it's that set,
or more accurately one of the volumes in that set, which evidently first gave author Patrick deWitt the idea for the source novel that in turn gave birth to The Sisters Brothers (you can read about deWitt's garage sale find here). There's another
reason why some folks who either live in the Pacific Northwest (as I do), or are at least interested in its pioneer history, might like the film, and that's due to The Sisters Brothers' kind of cool if fleeting references to a couple of arguably
lesser known Oregon locations. These include Oregon City, a smallish burg a few miles south of Portland that was one of the state's oldest encampments (it was reportedly the first city west of the Rocky Mountains to be incorporated) and which was in fact
the capital of the Oregon Territory for a few years. It's considerably less "prominent" now, though it has a certain "old school" charm, not to mention the scenic attraction of Willamette Falls, a cascading flow of water that was one major reason the town
was so successful in its early years, becoming home to several paper mills. There's also action that takes place in Jacksonville, which is a good deal further south (by Medford) and which still offers a really quaint downtown area that harkens back to an
earlier era, if perhaps not quite as early as the timeframe for The Sisters Brothers. Classical music fans may also know of Jacksonville courtesy of its annual Britt Festival.
The Time-Life Old West series may well have featured a couple of characters like Eli (John C. Reilly) and Charlie Sisters (Joaquin Phoenix), though it's likely they would have been in a volume about scoundrels and villains, as the two are hired
hitmen for guy known only as The Commodore (Rutger Hauer). The film begins with an interesting sequence that sees the Brothers' "handiwork" go seriously awry, with some terrifying after effects (one hopes that the shot of a horse on fire was not a
practical effect, and, yes, that's a joke). This is the first of a couple of scenes where director Jacques Audiard frames things from a considerable distance, and furthermore this particular sequence takes place in the dead of night, which means the
western film trope of a violent shootout looks considerably different here, with little bursts of light indicating bullets on their trajectory, but not much else being visible. It gives the film an appropriately off kilter opening, an askew feeling that
will arguably only increase as things go along.
With that mission only "successful" due to the fact that everyone was killed, The Commodore evidently insists on Charlie taking over a "lead man" position in any further escapades, this despite the fact that Charlie is shown to be something
of a wastrel and prone to getting so drunk that he can't stay on his horse. That of course leads to a bit of sibling rivalry from Eli, though the two almost immediately take off on their next "assignment", which is to meet up with another enforcer of The
Commodore's, a "tracker" named John Morris (Jake Gyllenhaal) who himself has been tasked by The Commodore with finding a chemist named Hermann Warm (Riz Ahmed). Morris is to deliver Warm to the Sisters Brothers, who in turn are supposed to kill him,
supposedly for stealing from The Commodore. Of course, all is not as it seems.
What's kind of odd about The Sisters Brothers is how it darts off on a number of really odd, and at times arguably unexplained or at least underdeveloped, sidebars. There's a whole weird vignette involving Eli getting a serious spider bite,
a sequence which involves a dream involving the Sisters' father in what almost looks like a moment from a horror film, but upon waking from his bite induced delirium, Eli is then informed that there was an attacker in camp who seriously injured the
Sisters' horses. What? Later, a scene in the town of Mayfield involves a rather odd looking female impresario by that very name (Rebecca Root), whose backstory might have been a bit better explicated. A coda at the end of the film featuring a sweet
cameo by the wonderful Carol Kane as the Sisters' mother also just kind of comes out of nowhere and frankly doesn't seem to know where it's going in any case.
Things are at least a little more straightforward with regard to Morris and Warm, who end up forging a friendship after Morris finagles his way into Warm's good graces. It turns out Warm has a formula which will almost magically "reveal" gold in
bodies of water when it's added to the water, and that is in fact what The Commodore is after. Suffice it to say that a number of things go horribly awry yet again, leading to a series of deaths and dismemberments.
I'm not entirely convinced The Sisters Brothers really works as a so-called "revisionist western", but it's decidedly odd and rather winning, especially in the performance category. Reilly really owns the film (he co-produced and was evidently one
of the leading forces behind getting the film made), but he's ably supported by Phoenix, Gyllenhaal and Ahmed. The film has an unabashedly whimsical side which may not mesh all that well with some of its more grotesque imagery and/or ideas, but it
provides the kind of bizarrely interesting story that could very well have helped to fill a volume of a Time-Life set on gonzo characters from the very wild west.
The Sisters Brothers takes a different tack than many recent "revisionist westerns". It's gritty as many of those entries are, but it also has a slightly comic subtext at times that may clash with content for some viewers. Reilly is wonderful as
the often hapless Eli, attempting to keep his wayfaring brother on track, and the film is often incredibly scenic. Technical merits are first rate, and The Sisters Brothers comes Recommended.
[CSW] -2.4- The dialogue was good the acting was great but the action scenes left a lot to be desires. Action scenes without great directing and proper cutting results in your inability to know what the end result are until all of the action is over by
finding out who or what remains. You get no since of what is transpiring during the action scenes themselves. I found this to be very frustrating. It's an odd but intriguing story that unfortunately just misses the proper comedic timing. And it leaves too
much doubt about how things in the action scenes actually play out as they did. All of the characters are thoroughly fleshed out but the story itself isn't.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - D-Box did little to enhance this movie.
º º