The Magnificent Seven Review: A Classic, Newly Diversified Western Rides Again


If the sight of Denzel Washington, guns blazing and saddled up for his first western, doesnt get your pulse racing, read elsewhere. Ignore the hot air blowing in from the Toronto Film Festival, where The Magnificent Seven premiered, that suggests Antoine Fuquas remake starring Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke and an ethnically diverse cast, isnt up to snuff. Really? The haters also threw bricks when Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen and Charles Bronson played gunslingers in John Sturges 1960 version, claiming it couldnt lick the boots of Akira Kurosawas 1954 Seven Samurai a classic Eastern about 16th-century Japanese sword-slingers that Sturges so ingloriously updated and indelibly ripped off. Relax, people. The new Seven isnt aiming for cinema immortality. Its two hours of hardcore, shoot-em-up pow and its entertaining as hell.

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The plot is essentially the same: Seven outlaws are hired to wipe out the bad guy who wants to destroy their town. In the 1960 version, Brooklyn-born Eli Wallach, using an outrageous Mexican accent, played the sombrero-wearing villain. This time, the bad guy is Donald Trump. OK, not really but it is a megalomaniac white dude named Bartholomew Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard, all stops out) who uses his army of Caucasian capitalists to buy up all the land, mine it for gold, and fulfill his power-mad dreams of empire building, circa 1879. If that means destroying everything in sight, starting with the local church, so be it. In Bogues view, the town of Rose Creek is gonna be huge.

Another droll conceit in the script that Nic Pizzolatto (True Detective) wrote with Richard Wenk, is to have the hiring done by a girl. Shes Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett), a redheaded widow with an multi-cultural eye for employing assassins. Washington plays Sam Chisolm, a bounty hunter who rides into town with a dont-shit-me attitude. No one mentions hes black. Reckon they dont have to; his quick draw has a way of silencing overt racism. Washington has a wicked blast in the role (Fuqua directed him to an Oscar in Training Day), especially when mixing it up with Pratt as Josh Faraday, a gambler who can juggle one-liners and sticks of dynamite with equal ease. Watching the playful give-and-take between Washington and Pratt is one of the films joys. And Vincent DOnofrio as Jack Horne, a grizzly mountain man who looks like a brick wall, is the butt of many jokes.

Hawke adds a note of gravity as Goodnight Robicheaux, a Confederate sharpshooter once known as the Angel of Death but now, alarmingly, losing his nerve. Luckily, he brings along his Korean best friend Billy Rocks (Byung-hun Lee), an expert with knives of every size. Then theres Vasquez (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), a Texican with trust issues. And wait till you see Red Harvest (a sensational Martin Sensmeier), a Comanche in face paint, possessed of killer skill with a bow and arrow.

Its disappointing that the color-blind casting is more surface gimmick than emotional depth charge, and that there is no attempt to ground the story in historical fact. But the actors give it their all. And its a kick to see diversity out there riding into a new kind of future. Better yet, Fuqua can stage a gunfight like nobodys business. At the end, when the new James Horner score morphs into the immortal theme created by Elmer Bernstein in 1960, the reasons we give ourselves over to The Magnificent Seven, then and now, is brought home with rousing clarity. Simplistic? OK. Primitive? Sure. Whats undeniable is the bliss.