True Grit
Category: Adventure
Year: 2010
Rating: -/10 ()
Director: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Country: USA
Language: English
Runtime:
110 min
Release Date:
22 December 2010
(USA)
See more »
Taglines:
Retribution
Writers:
Joel Coen (screenplay),
Ethan Coen (screenplay),
and 1 more credit »
Movie Storyline
Following the murder of her father by hired hand Tom Chaney, 14-year-old farm girl Mattie Ross sets out to capture the killer. To aid her, she hires the toughest U.S. marshal she can find, a man with "true grit," Reuben J. "Rooster" Cogburn. Mattie insists on accompanying Cogburn, whose drinking, sloth, and generally reprobate character do not augment her faith in him. Against his wishes, she joins him in his trek into the Indian Nations in search of Chaney. They are joined by Texas Ranger LaBoeuf, who wants Chaney for his own purposes. The unlikely trio find danger and surprises on the journey, and each has his or her "grit" tested.
Cast:
Jeff Bridges
-
Rooster Cogburn
Hailee Steinfeld
-
Mattie Ross
Matt Damon
-
LaBoeuf
Josh Brolin
-
Tom Chaney
Barry Pepper
-
Lucky Ned Pepper
Dakin Matthews
-
Col. Stonehill
Jarlath Conroy
-
Undertaker
Paul Rae
-
Emmett Quincy
Domhnall Gleeson
-
Moon (The Kid)
Elizabeth Marvel
-
40-Year-Old Mattie
Roy Lee Jones
-
Yarnell
Ed Corbin
-
Bear Man
Leon Russom
-
Sheriff
Bruce Green
-
Harold Parmalee
Candyce Hinkle
-
Boarding House Landlady
Filming Locations: Austin, Texas, USA
Soundtracks:
"LEANING ON THE EVERLASTING ARMS"
Written by Elisha A. Hoffman and Anthony J. Showalter
Official Site(s):
Paramount [United States] |
Trivia:
The original
True Grit featured Robert Duvall. Duvall appeared with Jeff Bridges in
Crazy Heart. His cousin Wayne Duvall appeared in the Coen Brothers' earlier film,
O Brother, Where Art Thou?.
User Review:
A Western with a difference True Grit
, rated: 9/10
What would a normal 14 year old in the late 1800s do upon finding out
her father was murdered by a scoundrel and a thief? Mattie Ross (played
by Hailee Steinfeld) is no ordinary 14 year old. She takes the train
into Fort Smith to deal with her father's body and stays back
determined to avenge his death. A poised and fearless young woman
(having run out of money, she spends the night at the undertaker's with
4 dead bodies!) with rapier sharp wits, she manages to recoup some of
the money owed her father. Mattie also finds out that US Marshall
Rooster Cogburn (Jeff Bridges) is her man for tracking the murderer Tom
Cheney who has fled into the Indian Territory. One eyed, overweight,
aging and permanently drunk and disheveled Cogburn is Mattie's choice,
she tells him, because she has heard he has TRUE GRIT and never lets go
of a fugitive. Rooster agrees to take on the mission for $100, and
after trying to evade Mattie by sneaking out ahead of her, allows her
to come along when she catches up with him. They are joined by Texas
Ranger LeBoef (Matt Damon) who is also hunting Tom Cheney, for a
senator's murder in Texas. The grit and patience of each of the three
fellow travelers is severely tested along this journey into the
wilderness and we see the men gaining a grudging respect for the young
girl as she more than holds her own on the trail. The ending is more
true to the book than it was in the 1969 version of the film. This Coen
brothers' adaptation of the book by Charles Portis is a somber tale
that lacks some of the humor and crackling interactions we saw between
the leads in the 1969 film. But it also has much less of the coyness
and sugar that came in ample measure in the older version. The role of
Rooster Cogburn won John Wayne his only Oscar and a memorable role it
was! In the 2010 adaptation Jeff Bridges is as good as he can get,
which is pretty darn good, but somehow the telling falls just short of
all time greatness.
The show is stolen by Hailee Steinfeld she has a poise and innocent
charm coupled with a fierce determination, that makes her one of the
more memorable characters in recent films. Matt Damn is more than
adequate as a stiff necked Texas Ranger, who slowly goes from boorish
to serious and dependable. Jeff Bridges is great as Rooster Cogburn, "a
one eyed fat drunk man who cannot shoot straight anymore", because he
does show true grit and more, a strong sense of justice and an innate
nobleness. John Wayne's iconic persona was utilized fully in the 1969
film by Hathaway, and here the Coen brothers find a persona that
matches the Duke's in stature. Bridges brings a loose limbed laziness
to his Cogburn, and yet manages, even at his most whiskey soaked
moments, to convey a sense of urgency and sharp wit that is required to
make the character work.
The film is wonderfully shot on location in Texas with sweeping vistas,
bleak forests in fall and winter, and seemingly endless plains. The
Coen Brothers go fully mainstream in this film, finally producing one
that has the violence mostly reined in (well some guys do die and
fingers are chopped off too), and none of the language or situations
containing being anything less than family friendly. But what makes
this a winner is the remarkable young woman on a quest to see a
criminal brought to justice. No simpering miss, she stands tall among
leading ladies, as a sharp witted and brave character, honorable and
just with all the good qualities that we often find lacking in the
world today.
This one is a certified winner and not to be missed.
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