Red Rock West
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| Red Rock West | |
|---|---|
Theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | John Dahl |
| Produced by | Steve Golin Sigurjón Sighvatsson |
| Written by | John Dahl Rick Dahl |
| Starring | Nicolas Cage Lara Flynn Boyle J.T. Walsh Dennis Hopper |
| Music by | William Olvis |
| Cinematography | Marc Reshovsky |
| Editing by | Scott Chestnut |
| Distributed by | Roxie Releasing |
| Release date(s) | France: June 16, 1993 United States: April 8, 1994 |
| Running time | 98 minutes |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $7,000,000 |
| Gross revenue | $2,502,551 |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Red Rock West is a neo-noir 1992 film directed by John Dahl. The film, written by Dahl and his brother Rick, was shot in Montana and Willcox, Arizona. The film was well received at the prestigious Toronto Film Festival, but deemed a cable and direct to video product by Columbia Tri-Star who owned the North American rights. When Bill Banning, the owner of a San Francisco movie theater and a huge fan of the film, arranged for a theatrical release, the film gained a "buzz" and toured the country as an art house hit.
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[edit] Plot
Nicolas Cage plays Michael, a drifter who wanders into rural Red Rock, Wyoming looking for work. When a local bar owner Wayne (J.T. Walsh) mistakes him for the hit man — "Lyle from Dallas" — he's hired to kill his wife, Michael doesn't correct him. Instead, he takes the money, then attempts to warn the wife, Suzanne (Lara Flynn Boyle) that her life is in danger. She, in turn, tries to hire him to kill her husband. Michael, knowing that the longer he stays in town the more danger he'll get into, continually tries to leave town, with no success. Matters only worsen when he becomes romantically involved with Suzanne...and when "Lyle from Dallas" (Dennis Hopper) finally does show up.
[edit] Featured cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Nicolas Cage | Michael Williams |
| J. T. Walsh | Wayne Brown/Kevin McCord |
| Lara Flynn Boyle | Suzanne Brown/Ann McCord |
| Dennis Hopper | Lyle from Dallas |
| Dwight Yoakam | Truck Driver |
| Timothy Carhart | Deputy Matt Greytack |
| Robert Apel | Howard |
[edit] Taglines
- Suzanne Brown was trouble. But trouble never looked so good.
- All Roads Lead To Intrigue.
- Where nothing is as it seems.
[edit] Production
Red Rock West was made in 1992 in Arizona on a budget of $7 million.[1] The domestic rights were sold to Columbia Tri-Star home video for $2.5 million and the foreign rights to Manifesto Films, a subsidiary of Polygram Filmed Entertainment.[1] Test screenings for the film were not strong and Peter Graves, an independent consultant who headed the marketing department at Polygram said, "The film doesn't fall neatly into any marketable category. A western film noir isn't something people can immediately spark to."[1] One of the film's producers suggested early on that the film be submitted to the Sundance Film Festival and was told by the studio that it wasn't a festival film.[1] Columbia sold Red Rock West to cable and it was shown seven times on HBO in the fall of 1993.[1]
The film opened successfully in theaters in Germany, Paris, and London in the summer of 1993. Piers Handling, director of the Toronto Film Festival saw the film in Paris and decided to show it at the festival in September.[1] Bill Banning, who owned the Roxie Cinema and Roxie Releasing in San Francisco saw Red Rock West in Toronto and thought that there might be an American theatrical audience for the film. It took him until January 1994 to find out who owned the rights.[1] The film had already played on HBO at this point and was due to come out on video in February.[1] Banning started showing Red Rock West at the Roxie Cinema on January 28, 1994 where it broke box office records before expanding to eight theaters in the city.[1] It then opened in Los Angeles and New York City.
[edit] Music
The soundtrack for the film features a number of country music performers, including Johnny Cash, Shania Twain, Toby Keith, The Kentucky Headhunters, and Sammy Kershaw. The closing credits song is "A Thousand Miles From Nowhere", by Dwight Yoakam, who also made his film acting debut in the film.
[edit] Reception
In his review for the Washington Post, Richard Harrington praised it as "a treasure waiting to be discovered."[2] In the New York Times, Caryn James called it "a terrifically enjoyable, smartly acted, over-the-top thriller."[3]

