Nevada
Smith DVD Review:
Synopsis
Nevada
Smith is a rugged innocent boy born in thei1890s during California's
gold rush days to a Native American mother and white father.
When he finds his parents have been murdered by vicious killers,
he sets out to track them down. He becomes a lone gunslinger
who is so blinded by his compulsion that it obscures any other
motive for living.
Critique
The late
Steve McQueen stars in Nevada Smith playing one of his most
challenging characters. He is Max Sand, a boy without an education
but a knack for revenge. It is safe to say McQueen owns this
film. Whether hes believable playing a boy or not, he
takes the character to great lengths and creates the right
kind of sympathy the audience can acknowledge and appreciate.
Going back to believability for a bit, Max cant be older
than eighteen to be considered a boy. McQueen was 36 at the
time the film was released, so why was he cast to play Max?
Im not sure who thought he could pass for Max without
raising other peoples eyebrows. This is only a small
concern and doesnt affect the flow or purpose of the
film.
As for
the character, Max is on a journey to find the killers and
take revenge by killing them. While this premise is as small
and one-sided as it sounds, screenwriter John Michael Hayes
constructs some subplots and exciting action in between to
add some drama and sincerity to the story. His journey is
exciting to follow right up until the very last scene, but
then the film just ends. This makes sense, but isnt
satisfactory. Questions remain, such as where is Max going
now? How is he going to continue his life? Any indication
or answers to those and other questions would have created
a better ending.
The contribution
of supporting players Karl Malden, Arthur Kennedy, Brian Keith,
Suzanne Pleshette, and Martin Landau provide much-needed backup
for McQueen even though each of their screen time is limited.
Malden is especially fun to watch as the main bad guy. Landau
is in the film for only ten minutes or so, but his cameo,
if you want to call it that, is a pleasure to watch. Director
Henry Hathaway takes the screenplay to great lengths. His
sense of direction, mood, and action create a great environment
for the western genre Nevada Smith is playing to. Hathaway
and crew supply the film with many great visuals and locations.
The film spans well over several states and warrants many
different locations and sets. Each location is constructed
very well, whether is be either by man or nature. To sum up
the film, Nevada Smith is simple, yet constructed and executed
beautifully.
8 out
of 10
The Video
For the
first time on DVD, Nevada Smith looks really good. Paramount
presents this film in 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen. Compared
to the VHS presentation, which really looks its age, the DVD
presentation holds a really nice upgrade. Gone are most of
the grainy images, dark tones, lack of color detail, and the
meek black level. I wont say the transfer is anywhere
near excellent, but it is very much impressive. Paramount
and Co. improved on the many grainy images and lines of the
print. Even though the presentation still carries noticeable
grain and such, the overall transfer is still impressive.
The color palette is used very effectively with a nice variety
of color detail, but I noticed some forms of edge enhancement
along the way. Overall, Nevada Smith deserves praise and the
improvement from the crappy VHS presentation is a job very
well done.
7 out
of 10
The Audio
Nevada
Smith is presented in Dolby Digital English and French Mono
soundtracks. Front speakers get all the attention while the
rear speakers are mostly ignored. The film relies on its audio
presentation in many occasions and sadly there isnt
much quality to support it. Dialogue is very clear and Alfred
Newmans score comes across very nicely. Despite the
lack of actual surround sound, Nevada Smith offers a mediocre
presentation thats not as bad as it might seem.
7 out
of 10
The Extras
Dont
look for anything in this section. The inclusion of English
subtitles is a mandatory standard now, but thanks for them
anyway, Paramount. Other than that, this area is as blank
as a blank check.
0 out
of 10
Overall
Nevada
Smith is a western with all of the necessary ingredients for
very good entertainment. With the help of Steve McQueen and
a strong supporting cast, the film plays to near to perfection,
supplied also by a strong script and direction by Henry Hathaway.
The DVD includes a neat update of the print, but lacks special
features. All things considered, Nevada Smith makes the western
genre look damn good.
Overall
DVD Rating: 6 out of 10 (not an average)
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