page 2 Alexis Pratt True Grit 1s the 2010 film adaption of the 1968 novel of the same name. The novel was adapted previously, in 1969, into a film version starring John Wayne. Although I’ve never seen the pre- vious film adaption, I am rather surprised that any- one would attempt to re- - adapt a western starring John Wayne, let alone the one which won him his first Oscar. It seems a bit like trying to enter- when the previous act was Jesus and his whole “water-to-wine” bit. It might just be a miracle, but the 2010 True Grit is excellent. The film follows Mattie Ross (Hailee Steinfeld), a young girl from 1800’s Arkansas seeking justice for her father, who was mur- dered by one of his own farmhands, Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin). After the murder Chaney flees into Indian territory, so Mattie hard-bargains her way in a contract with Reuben “Rooster” Cog- burn, a U.S. Marshal re- nowned for his merci- lessness and rough char- acter. She also rejects the offer of a proud and self- confidant Texas Ranger named La Bouef, who has been tracking Chaney but has failed to kill him, and wants him to face justice for a Tex- as murder. Mattie is res- olute: either he will hang in Arkansas, or she will shoot him herself. Even when the two men ditch her and tell her to go home and churn butter, Mattie persists. She chases them down and proves her strength of character is indomitable, and the three embark on a perilous and thrilling adventure. Perhaps what I found so appealing in True Grit is that the Coen Brothers seem utterly. uncon- cerned with a decon- struction of the Old West, or a building upon its mythos and rituals, but are solely focused on the art of telling a good story. The movie is cap- tivating and expansive, brutal and violent, ad- venturous but mournful. At the same time, it’s very funny. The film is laced with a bleak and morbid humor, inter- twined with a regretful realization: time catches up with everyone. In one scene, Cogburn pledges to bury a dying man, but in the morning plans to head off without men- tioning a burial. Mattie protests, “But we prom- ised to bury the poor soul inside!” His re- sponse is gruff, pragmat- ic, and arrestingly funny: “Ground’s too hard. = Bonsmmaeo 2) JEFF BRIDGES MATT DAMON JOSH, BROLIN Them men wanted a de- cent burial, they should have got themselves killed - in. summer.” about this movie is Hail- ee Steinfeld’s portrayal of Mattie Ross, an intel- ligent young girl with purely Protestant values. She might be high- strung, moralistic, and judgmental, but unlike any other woman — let alone a girl — I have ever seen. in: a Weston, Mattie makes meaning- ful decisions and actions. She is central to the plot, not as an object of desire but as a person. Hailee Steinfeld’s performance is so commanding and subtle, she disappears entirely into her charac- ter. I think it might be harder to say the same about Jeff Bridges, who certainly is working as “the Dude”, and at times. descends into such gruff and guttural vocal depths that I found him incomprehensible. Still, his performance as Cog- burn is wonderfully lay- ered and rich; he plays a drunken, washed-up and grizzled old man with conviction, his, morality seemingly in flux throughout. His sarcasm and practicality contrast delightfully against La Bouef and Mattie, who are similarly tightly- wound and self-serious. Matt Damon is surpris- ingly difficult to recog- nize as Le Bouef, and effectively immerses himself in the role of a high-strung, self- aggrandizing and arro- gant ranger, and he blends in as seamlessly as the rest of the cast. The tensions between La Bouef and Cogburn, in their unlikely pairing, are beautiful. Mattie strug- gles with both Cogburn’s generally ‘uncivil behav- ior and the unfamiliar viciousness ‘of the’ wil- derness, and her endeav- ors interplay with the men’s hostilities in a way I found fascinating. Ultimately, there is a brokenness-to the world that these characters in- habit: their own flaws quickly crack any ap- pearance of purity, and the West they live in is so harsh and unforgiving that even their morals must adapt or . die. My ultimate rating: A- ESSE ES Ess, a —