Film Reviews Movie Showtimes | Cult Leader | 'The Proposition'
Justin Henine-Hardenne  |  by www.metroactive.com. All rights reserved. 15.01 | 17:55

But The Proposition turned out to be more than even Cave fans could have expected. Violent but poignant, it's like an Australian version of Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in the West, telling the story of tragic figures caught in the same battle between a frontier and the imperialistic force of "civilization." Interestingly, in Leone's version, the tragedy is that civilization wins, driving away the epic figures of Old West mythology as it marches through the desert.

In The Proposition, the tragedy is that the frontier devours everyone not only can it not be tamed, but it seems to chew up and spit out the British imperialists, the god-forsaken immigrants and the aboriginal people indiscriminately. "Australia, what fresh hell is this?" asks Ray Winstone at one point, and he's not kidding.

No one will ever accuse The Proposition of being too slick. It is a truly dirty movie. Stars Guy Pearce and Winstone have never looked more scraggly and just plain gross.

(And for Pearce, that's really saying something.) Even Emily Watson seems a little grotesque. Meanwhile, there seems to be a plague of flies on this particular little outpost.

The washed-out backgrounds make it look as though the horizon is fading into a void of dust. There is grue everywhere, often oozing or dripping out of someone's body. In other words, it's fair to say that this is a truly uncompromising vision of the Western.

It's not doing it justice to say, as many did, that it's like Deadwood for the big screen. And it's not hard to see why it wasn't all that big of a success in theaters. But it's already developed a following that will undoubtedly grow over time.

The plot of The Proposition is ridiculously simple. A British officer played by Winstone captures outlaw Pearce and makes him an offer he can't refuse: If he doesn't bring in his older brother a criminal so out of control that the native people believe he's turned himself into a "dog-man" his gentler younger brother will be executed. But what makes it rewatchable and such a great cult film, is that its themes are so mysterious.

Whatever the movie's trying to say, it seems profound. The Proposition touches on obsession, family, revenge, justice, racism, sacrifice and a lot more. It gives us heroes who are villains and villains who are heroes.

It gives us myth and legend from a place we've never experienced like this before. And in both form and content, it gives us true grit. Cult Leader is a weekly column about the state of cult movies and offbeat corners of pop culture.

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