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Appaloosa Poster

Appaloosa

Feelings get you killed.
2008 | 115m | English

(67121 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Two friends hired to police a small town that is suffering under the rule of a rancher find their job complicated by the arrival of a young widow.
Release Date: Sep 19, 2008
Director: Ed Harris
Writer: Ed Harris, Robert B. Parker, Robert Knott
Genres: Drama, Crime, Western
Keywords small town, new mexico, ranch, cowboy, far west
Production Companies New Line Cinema, Groundswell Productions, Axon Films
Box Office Revenue: $20,211,394
Budget: $20,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Ed Harris Virgil Cole
Viggo Mortensen Everett Hitch
Robert Jauregui Marshall Jack Bell
Jeremy Irons Randall Bragg
Timothy V. Murphy Vince
Luce Rains Dean
James Tarwater Chalk
Boyd Kestner Bronc
Gabriel Marantz Joe Whittfield
Benjamin Rosenshein Town Boy
Cerris Morgan-Moyer Tilda
James Gammon Earl May
Timothy Spall Phil Olson
Tom Bower Abner Raines
Erik J. Bockemeier Fat Wallis
Freddie Hice Bragg's Third Man
Tim Carroll Wagon Driver
Neil Summers Bragg's Fourth Man
Renée Zellweger Allie
Bounthanh Xaynhachack Chin
Ariadna Gil Katie
Art Usher Clerk
Clark Sanchez Teamster
Cliff Gravel Barber
Mike Watson Night Rider
Rex Linn Clyde Stringer
Corby Griesenbeck Charlie Tewksbury
Lance Henriksen Ring Shelton
Adam Nelson Mackie Shelton
Bob L. Harris Judge Callison
Daniel Parker Mueller
Ed Pennybacker Conductor
Alvin William 'Dutch' Lunak Sharps
Martin Connelly Apache Elder
Danny Edmo Young Brave
Argos MacCallum Beauville Sheriff Russell
Cynthia Huerta Mexican Woman
Rachel de la Torre Citizen of Appaloosa
Name Job
Ed Harris Director, Screenplay
Ralph Watson Steadicam Operator, Camera Operator
Ginger Sledge Unit Production Manager
Allison Jones Casting
Robin McMullan Costume Supervisor
Jeff Beal Original Music Composer
Robert B. Parker Novel
Kathryn Himoff Editor
Paul Berolzheimer Sound Effects Editor
Linda Lee Sutton Set Decoration
Sara Scarritt Production Coordinator
Lorey Sebastian Still Photographer
G.C. Cunningham First Assistant Editor
John Pritchett Sound Mixer
Gregg Rudloff Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Lamarr Gray Rigging Gaffer
Lise Richardson Music Editor
Dondi Bastone Music Supervisor
Jeanne McCarthy Casting
John T. Reitz Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Steve Arnold Art Direction
Mads Hansen Production Supervisor
Piero Mura Sound Effects Editor
James Morioka Sound Effects Editor
David C. Robinson Costume Design
Nicole Abellera Hallman Casting
Joanna Kennedy Script Supervisor
Jon Mete Dialogue Editor
Robert Knott Screenplay
Dean Semler Director of Photography
Aaron Glascock Supervising Sound Editor
Waldemar Kalinowski Production Design
Kira Roessler Dialogue Editor
Mark De Alessandro Stunts
Rachel de la Torre Stand In
Name Title
Robert Knott Producer
Ginger Sledge Producer
Toby Emmerich Executive Producer
Sam Brown Executive Producer
Candy Trabuco Associate Producer
Caldecot Chubb Executive Producer
Kathryn Himoff Associate Producer
Ed Harris Producer
Michael London Executive Producer
Janice Williams Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 31 14
2024 5 21 37 13
2024 6 24 41 10
2024 7 22 40 15
2024 8 15 28 10
2024 9 17 30 11
2024 10 16 29 9
2024 11 14 27 8
2024 12 14 21 10
2025 1 14 23 8
2025 2 11 17 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 2 1
2025 10 2 2 2

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

We can't have our law officers beatin' people half to death for no reason. Appaloosa is based on the 2005 novel of the same name written by Robert B. Parker. It's directed by Ed Harris, who also co-writes the story with Robert Knott. Harris also stars alongside Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger, J ... eremy Irons & Lance Henriksen. Music is by Jeff Beal and Dean Semler provides cinematography on location in Albuquerque, Austin and Santa Fe. Appaloosa is in the grip of bully boy rancher Randall Bragg (Irons), who finally oversteps the mark when the latest Marshall and his deputies are killed in cold blood. The townsfolk decide enough is enough and hire no nonsense travelling lawmen Virgil Cole (Harris) and his sidekick Everett Hitch (Mortensen) to protect and serve the town. Ruling with a rod of iron, Cole & Hitch start to bring order to Appaloosa, but the arrival in town of pretty Allie French (Zellweger) causes quite a stir between the two men. Bad timing too since the guys are trying to get Bragg to his rightful execution. In the modern era the Western has been the hardest genre for film makers to tackle. You can probably count on one hand the number of great or agreeable ones that have surfaced post Costner and Eastwood's efforts of 1990 and 1992 respectively. Enter Ed Harris, who undaunted by the long odds of getting a Western to be successful; and suffering worrying overtures from his backers at New Line Cinema, got Appaloosa made. Well made as it happens. Since the story itself is etched like the Wyatt Earp legend, there's really no fresh perspective on offer here. In fact, anyone familiar with Edward Dmytryk's excellent Warlock from 1959 will feel some narrative déjà vu. But Appaloosa does have strong performances and lush landscapes to see it successfully home. Slotting in a good helping of action, romance and humour also goes some way to making Harris' movie a worthy modern day Oater. True, the cliche's are many, but Harris wasn't after revisionism, he wanted (and got) old fashioned Oater values. A film that follows those old beloved B movie Western conventions, but one that still retains a topical criminal thread. The best reward in the film comes from spending time with Harris & Mortensen. Their characters are nicely drawn and not over cooked by the script. Cole & Hitch are devoted to each other, lots of straight love and respect exists between the two men. Their bond is believably brought to life by Harris & Mortensen, who formed a friendship when making A History Of Violence for David Cronenberg in 2005. Zellweger and Irons too are not without high merit value. She (stepping in when Diane Lane walked over delays), is pleasing and captivates in what is the critical glue role. While he is dandy dastardly supreme, a well spoken villain of much intelligence and crafty as a cat. Appaloosa is a subtle film, both in story and as a technical production. Beal's score is unobtrusive, while Semler's photography manages to deliver that old fashioned feel that Harris was after (the low lighting for the interiors is particularly on the money) . Harris' direction is smooth and unhurried in pace, with the odd inspired bit thrown in for good measure (check out the up-tilt camera work during a train on a bridge sequence). While the production design can't be faulted. All that and you got the likes of Henriksen and Timothy Spall in the support cast too. A lovely film that is as tight as the friendship at its core. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024