July 11, 2013

Page 22

The lowest Depp The Lone Ranger At one point during it’s journey to the screen, Disney halted production on The Lone Ranger because it was costing too much and they weren’t sure a Western-themed summer tent pole movie was a good idea. Then, they caved into the likes of Johnny Depp and director Gore Verbinski, producing it for a reported $225 million. This will now go down as a huge, massive, by hilarious, unthinkable, crazy, job-killing blunder. Bob Grimm The people who had the good sense to initially halt production should’ve stuck to their guns. b g ri m m @ ne w s re v i e w . c o m What a misguided, uncomfortable, sickening clown act this movie this is. Johnny Depp allowing himself to appear onscreen as Tonto, with his face painted to mask the fact he isn’t Native American, is a travesty. His movies have been mediocre at best lately, but this goes beyond the likes of The Tourist when it comes to poor career choices.

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Flower Power in the Black Rock Desert - High Rock Canyon The diverse habitats in the Black Rock Desert High Rock Canyon Emigrant Trails National Conservation Area (NCA) support hundreds of species of wildflowers. Many are attention-grabbing and dazzling, with large blossoms and stunning colors, while others reward only the most observant eyes. Generally, wildflowers are most abundant at lower elevations early in the season, and are abundant right now at higher elevations. Every spring, some part of the Black Rock Desert NCA puts on a colorful wildflower show. Generally, wildflowers emerge in April and continue blooming into August, but this varies with annual rainfall and elevation. This year, the rainfall has been good and flowers abound. One of the best places to view wildflowers is in the low sagebrush plant communities near Stevens Camp during late May and early June. There is always something blooming here, including brilliant yellow buckwheat, blue lupine and white bitterroot. Although not as dependable, in wet years the barren hills surrounding the Black Rock Desert Playa are awash in the vibrant colors of bee plant, Indian paintbrush, and yellow daisies. Visitors to the hot springs at Soldier Meadows should be on the lookout for basalt cinquefoil, a low-growing herb with bright yellow five-petalled flowers that grows in the moist, alkaline soil near hot springs. This is the only place in Nevada where the basalt cinquefoil is found, so take care enjoy their charm without damaging them or their habitat. From Reno: Take I-8- East to 447 North to Gerlach, take Highway 38 North and continue towards Vya. The scenery is majestic and the flora speaks poetic verse. Artists come to paint and photograph these vast scenic by-ways and it’s something not to be missed. Ensure your tires are in great shape and enjoy! Visit Friends of Black Rock High Rock’s Visitors Center: 320 Main St, Gerlach for maps and more information or call 775.557.2900

Connect - Inspire - Protect

“What does ‘Tonto’ mean in Spanish?”

1 Poor

2 Fair

3 Good

4 Very Good

5 excellent

22 | RN&R |

JULY 11, 2013

The movie is some sort of odd parody of The Lone Ranger, or at least it comes off that way, with strange comedic undertones and clichés exaggerated to the point of intolerability. Remember how the comedy Back to the Future: Part III paid homage to the West by exaggerating it in a semi-funny way? The Lone Ranger makes Back to the Future: Part III seem authentic in comparison. How bad is it? The framing device for this movie has a very old Tonto telling some kid dressed as the Lone Ranger the story of his meeting the masked man and their travels together. Tonto, looking like anything but a human being in tragic old age makeup, is making a living posing as a Native American in a museum exhibit, right next to a grizzly bear. Depp and Verbinski (Depp’s Pirates of the Caribbean partner in crime) choose to play this depressing storytelling angles for laughs, with Depp mugging more than a heavily armed homeless guy in the Manhattan subway. Depp wears a dead crow on his head throughout the film, with his face covered in war paint in the flashbacks. He takes some sort of odd, Buster Keaton physical approach to the role that makes him look desperate, lost, and straining for the laughs that

don’t come. His line deliveries are stilted and unimaginative. It represents a career low for a guy capable of great things. It’s a bad career move reminiscent of such travesties as John Travolta in Battlefield Earth, Louis Gosset Jr. in Enemy Mine and Sylvester Stallone in Judge Dredd. It’s a choice that will haunt him for the rest of his career. As for the Lone Ranger himself, Armie Hammer doesn’t seem to know what movie he is in. He sports an inconsistent Western movie accent, and plays the virtuous John Reid as a stooge to Tonto’s voice of reason. He is, in no way, prepared to handle a role of this magnitude. As the title character, he makes no impression, and is second fiddle to the top-billed, masquerading Depp. Depp and Hammer aren’t even close to being the worst things about this movie. William Fichtner, an actor I usually enjoy, is unwatchable as bad guy Butch Cavendish, a scarred, goldtoothed monster who eats the heart of the Lone Ranger’s brother. This is in direct contrast to the comedic, goofy nature of the rest of the film. OK, you are going for something dark with Cavendish, but watching him wipe the blood off a still beating heart from his lips is a bit much. It’s the sort of thing that leaves you too aghast to laugh the next time Depp makes one of his stupid funny faces. In my head, when Depp mugged shortly thereafter, I was thinking “Yeah, well, I just saw a man die in a fashion that made that moment where the priest pulled a heart out of somebody in the Indiana Jones movie look like Mary Poppins. Laughter isn’t coming from me for a while, Johnny. Sorry.” Everything in this movie is taken too far, from the dirt makeup, to the crazy beards and chops, to the caricature accents. Even the sound of a kid eating a peanut is turned up to an extent that becomes gut churning and abrasive. I often complain about PG-13 horror movies that should just go for the R and turn up the dread and gore factor. Well, I get even more annoyed by PG-13 movies marketed to kids and families that contain the kind of violence on display in this crap. Heart eating, horse trampling, multiple gunshots, stabbings, and the threat of sticking a duck foot up somebody’s ass should not be on the viewing agenda for the entire family. Disney is going to take a major bath on this one. And, as for the summer, it’s another major blockbuster disappointment after misfires like Man of Steel, World War Z, The Hangover Part III and After Earth. This is officially turning into a summer of wasteful, total trash movies. I was truly embarrassed for Depp watching The Lone Ranger. The mere idea that what he was putting up on the screen is entertaining or useful in any way seems ludicrous. Remember before Jack Sparrow, when he was a boutique move star, an actor who chose interesting and scintillating projects like Cry Baby and Ed Wood? Ω


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