
- #The magnificent seven 2016 cast movie#
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#The magnificent seven 2016 cast tv#
Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.Danny DeVito to Make Broadway Debut in 'The Price' Revival Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here. “The Magnificent Seven” premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival. As one of the Seven promises in a line typical of the film’s surprisingly pointed vision of the future: “What we lost in the fire we’ll find in the ashes.” Grade: B If “Seven Samurai” and the first take on “The Magnificent Seven” were about the end of a way of life, this version points to a new beginning, one in which we can build positively on the shared past that we all carry together.
#The magnificent seven 2016 cast movie#
For a movie that could have been a cheap photocopy of something that has already been done to death, this early fall surprise rides into multiplexes with the fresh sting of a new season. The skies are blue (not that muddy gray color you see in the revisionist Westerns), the score is prickly (“Ravenous” often comes to mind), and the shoot-outs - while infrequent - are enormous and staged with a more coherent sense of geography and progression that Fuqua has ever mustered before. Truly, “The Magnificent Seven” is a story of simple pleasures, and it gets the little things right. The inevitable pyrrhic victory has all the weight of a light summer breeze, though the bickering between Hawke and Lee is so enjoyable that most won’t mind. If anything, his first feature-length screenplay leans too hard on levity, prioritizing the ample chemistry between its leads over any real sense that these cowboys are in a battle for their lives. Pizzolatto (who co-wrote the script with Richard Wenk), seems to have shed himself of the dour machismo that made the second season of “True Detective” such an atrocity. Of course, part of the fun is that Chisolm and his pals are reluctant warriors, each a little salty and fatalistic about the task for which they’ve been hired. READ MORE: 13 Films We Can’t Wait To See At TIFF 2016 America’s disenfranchised are joining together to save the country from itself, fighting to defend a place they’ve been made to feel doesn’t belong to them - Donald Trump better hope this movie doesn’t catch on. Finally, the motley six become the magnificent seven when they cross paths with a deadly Comanche archer played by newcomer Martin Sensmeier.

Next is South Korean superstar Byung-hun Lee (“I Saw the Devil”), perfect as Robicheaux’s knife-throwing partner in carnage. Case in point: The first of the good-hearted guns for hire she finds is Denzel Washington.įirst up is Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, playing a woefully underwritten Mexican outlaw who Chisolm lets off the hook in exchange for his help. Emma Cullen (“Music & Lyrics” star Haley Bennett) never becomes as well-realized a character as the movie pretends she is, but her presence is an early hint that the film has a mind towards reinventing the Wild West in a way that reflects more contemporary social norms. You know the people of Rose Creek are going to pool together their meager resources and hire a small group of (somewhere between six and eight) mercenary gunslingers to defend them, but - in this telling - a woman spearheads the effort.

Where systemic injustice and business-related bullying are never permitted without a fight! At least not in the movies.Īnd so this is where things get interesting. The people agree to Bogue’s terms and peacefully surrender their land, the end. So he does what any decent corporate raider would do: He guns down a few of the strongest men in town and gives the helpless locals three weeks to abandon the town they built with their own hands. Bogue is a sociopath, but most of all he is a capitalist - Rose Creek is essential to his business, and when its residents refuse to clear out, he sees them as standing in the way of God. The basic structure of the story hasn’t changed a bit: The year is 1879, and the frontier mining town of Rose Creek is being bled dry by a mustache-twirling robber baron named Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard, who enjoyably dusts off the same mad-eyed villain shtick he’s previously used in the “The Green Lantern”). 'Alone Together' Review: Katie Holmes' COVID Lockdown Rom-Com Quietly Shines, Until It Doesn'tġ9 Best Erotic Thrillers, from Adrian Lyne to Brian De Palmaįrom 'Reality Bites' to 'Fatal Attraction,' Keep Track of All the Upcoming Film-to-TV Adaptations
#The magnificent seven 2016 cast plus#
New Movies: Release Calendar for June 17, Plus Where to Watch the Latest Films
