Purgatory (1999 film)

Purgatory, also known as Purgatory West of the Pecos, is a 1999 American Western fantasy television film directed by Uli Edel.[1][2] The film premiered on TNT on January 10, 1999. It focuses on a gang of outlaws who find their way to a hidden valley and a peaceful town where residents shun swearing, alcohol, guns and any kind of violence but resemble dead Western heroes. The outcome is marked by its exploration of the interface between legend-making and humanitarian values.

Purgatory
Written byGordon T. Dawson
Directed byUli Edel
StarringSam Shepard
Eric Roberts
Randy Quaid
Brad Rowe
Donnie Wahlberg
J. D. Souther
Amelia Heinle
Theme music composerBrad Fiedel
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Daniel Schneider
Running time94 minutes
Release
Original networkTNT
Original release
  • January 10, 1999 (1999-01-10)

Plot

A murderous outlaw band led by Blackjack Britton and Cavin Guthrie robs a bank. During the subsequent gunfight, a prostitute named Dolly Sloan is shot and dies in the arms of Cavin's nephew, Sonny. The gang flees, pursued by a posse, and manages to escape through a dust storm, following a tunnel into a green valley. The town of Refuge welcomes them, but they are puzzled by the residents, who do not carry guns or swear, and who flock to the church whenever the bell tolls.

The youngest gang member, Sonny, thinks he recognizes some of them. He befriends a woman named Rose who deflects his questions and asks some pointed ones of her own, beginning with “How many men have you killed?” The rest of the outlaws occupy the saloon and begin causing trouble. One of the gang is struck by lightning when he prepares to throw his knife at the church. His body is carried away by a Native American who guards the gates to a mist-filled property outside of town.

Sonny thinks he has seen some of the town's residents before, but he is unable to remember where. The rest of the outlaws occupy the saloon and begin causing trouble. Sonny befriends a woman named Rose who tries to steer him away from asking questions but, as he investigates further, he realizes that the town appears to be occupied by former notorious gunfighters. These include Wild Bill Hickok, the town's Sheriff, Jesse James, Billy the Kid and Doc Holliday, although they deny their identities to Sonny. Later he talks to a gardener named Lamb whom he prompts to admit who he really is. Before Sonny can ask more questions, some of Blackjack's men tear up Lamb's garden. Enraged, he beats one to death with his shovel and is led away by a mysterious Native American who acts as Gatekeeper to the other realm.

While talking to Doc, Sonny lets slip the true nature of their gang and the Sheriff asks them to saddle up and leave town. Blackjack orders all his men to assemble in the saloon except Sonny, who is ejected who sneaks in anyway and overhears the gang members planning to rob the town on their way out, while Cavin plans to rape Rose. Sonny joins the others in church, where he begs them to defend their town. The townspeople finally admit to Sonny that Refuge is a form of Purgatory. If they can go ten years while resisting the temptations of their former lives they are admitted to Heaven. They don't want to face off against Blackjack's gang because they fear it will cost them their souls. A frustrated Sonny leaves the church and is jumped by Blackjack and Cavin, who beat him unconscious.

The next morning, a battered Sonny straps on his guns and prepares to face Blackjack's gang alone. The townspeople are summoned by the church bells, but while most of them comply, Hickok, Holliday, James, and Billy all join Sonny, inspired by his willingness to die to protect Rose. A shootout erupts, during which Blackjack's gang is slaughtered, but Cavin manages to shoot Sonny before being killed by him in return. Sonny, despite being fatally wounded, does not feel pain and does not die. Hickok welcomes him to Refuge, realizing that Sonny has earned his second chance. When Blackjack arrives and challenges Hickok, he loses. "I guess I'm one of you now," Blackjack jokes, realizing the truth of the situation. "I wouldn't count on it," Hickok replies before dispatching Blackjack finally.

The Gatekeeper carries the bodies of Cavin and Blackjack to the edge of a fiery pit, into which they are thrown screaming. Hickok and the others grimly follow, but the stagecoach arrives and the driver tells them that by sacrificing their second chances to protect the others, they have secured a place in Heaven. "The Creator may be tough, but He ain't blind," he says. Sonny asks to stay behind with Rose, and Hickok hands him the Sheriff's badge. The coach then leaves, riding upwards into the light.

Cast

Production

Writer Gordon Dawson had worked on several westerns previously, and was inspired to write a religious morality tale set in an Old West town inhabited by ghosts.[3] The film was shot on the backlot of Warner Brothers studios during the summer of 1998.[4]

Director Uli Edel had always wanted to direct a western but was aware of the genre's dwindling popularity with the major Hollywood film studios in the late 1990s, as were Purgatory's producers.[5] It was Edel's involvement in directing which convinced Sam Shepard to agree to star, feeling that as a European Edel would bring different ideas to the film. Shepard described the filming as difficult because of the short shooting schedule available.[6]

Brad Fiedel had worked with Uli Edel previously and the two agreed that the film's music should "support the classic western elements of the project and not overplay the otherworldly elements so that the audience could enjoy discovering the strangeness of what was really going on in this seemingly normal town without the score telegraphing it too much".[7]

Reception

Purgatory was first aired by TNT Network on January 10, 1999. The movie was advertised and marketed as "Not your ordinary damn western".[8]

Variety gave the film a positive review, praising the story and Sam Shepard's performance in particular.[9] The New York Times' Anita Gates was also enthusiastic about this “fascinating, deceptively dark western with more than a touch of The Twilight Zone,'' observing that “Gordon Dawson's script makes the process satisfying despite the fact that any viewer who has noticed the title of the film knows the answer from the beginning”.[10] When it was shown in Britain, Radio Times described the film as “a barmy but richly enjoyable western fable”.[11]

Hugh H. Davis later provided a chapter examining Purgatory's surreal and religious themes in the compilation Undead in the West. This is a wry meditation on the changes rung on legend in the film, where the heroes portrayed had already been immortalized by reputation while still alive; now they are ‘dead’ they must earn their immortal redemption by giving up everything that had earned them their reputation in the first place. Parallels are also drawn between the dime novels that contributed to the making of the Western legends, of which Sonny Dillard is an avid reader, and the celluloid embroidering of the same legends. High Noon in particular, the prototype of the climactic final shootout, had gone through many variations in later films, and references to several of these exist in Purgatory. But informing everything else there is Dante's Purgatorio, the theology of which permeates Uli Edel's film, according to Davis.[12]

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References

  1. Humphreys, Keigh (18 September 2015). "Weekend Film Recommendation ***With Interview of Star Brad Rowe***: Purgatory". Washington Monthly. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  2. Paul Green (25 February 2016). Encyclopedia of Weird Westerns: Supernatural and Science Fiction Elements in Novels, Pulps, Comics, Films, Television and Games, 2d ed. McFarland. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-4766-2402-0.
  3. M. S. Mason, “'Purgatory': a morality tale that wears spurs”, The Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1999
  4. Los Angeles Times, 3 June 1998
  5. Staci D. Kramer, “TNT Rides Again”, Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune, 10 January 1999
  6. "Sam Shepard Prefers His Tradition With a Twist". Los Angeles Times. 1999-01-09. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  7. Classic Western Meets the Twilight Zone, Brad Fiedel site
  8. Poster at Philadelphia Inquirer, 10 Jan 1999, Page 501
  9. Ray Richmond, Variety, January 7, 1999
  10. Gates, Anita (1999-01-09). "TELEVISION REVIEW; A Quick Draw, and Yet, So Slow It's Excruciating". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  11. "Purgatory – review | cast and crew, movie star rating and where to watch film on TV and online". Radio Times. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  12. Scarecrow Press, 2012, "Moving West and Beyond: Life in the Midst of Death in Purgatory", chapter 14, pp.220-36
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