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 Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Jesse who?
In this delightful film, Jesse James takes a back seat in the buckboard to Cole Younger who shows a real talent for fixing calliopes and robbing banks, though this one didn't turn out too well. Better let Jesse plan the next one.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Boring. No action. Not worth viewing.
I don't know how accurate this movie is compared to the true story of Jessy James. What I know is it is boring. There was only two scenes where both sides were shooting at each other. And they were over in less than 2 minutes.

It also drags in many places. For example, the baseball game scene dragged for about 15 minutes!
It's not worth viewing at all.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - THE OTHER GREAT JESSE JAMES FILM
Philip Kaufman's version of the last days of the Younger Brothers was made a bit before Walter Hill's "The Long Riders," and it suffers from being hyped as a serious action film when it is, in fact, a black comedy. Robert Duvall's Jesse James is so deliciously over-the-top in his self-righteousness and his faux-piety that he tends to obscure Cliff Robertson's turn as the bemused rationalist Cole Younger who finds too much of life "a wonderment," while Jesse just shoots at it and runs.
If Hill's film is about family and ties of blood, Kaufman's film is about greed and double-dealing raised to an art form. Everyone, except pious, mad Jesse is for sale in Kaufman's world. The Missouri state legislature can be bribed by the railroad to cancel an amnesty bill. Cole Younger plots with a venal banker to con the "good people" of Northfield, Minnesota out of their savings, then plans to rob the banker. The citizens of Northfield think nothing of cheating like mad to defeat a visiting baseball team from St. Paul and form the ultimate "shoot first" posse once the James and Younger gang presumes to raid their town. Northfield is the sort of civilized place where it's O.K. to pelt a madman with stones, but definitely bad form to shoot him. When the Missouri boys take on this group of respectable Northern burgers they take on much more than they bargained for.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - QUIRKY, ATMOSPHERIC GEM
I love this little known and mostly forgotten gem of a western that takes a genre and a myth and plays with all the quirky elements. No movie can reproduce historical fact -- not even a documentary. I love the feel of the film and the rough around the edges style. It's like life -- sometimes funny and sometimes violent. This is a very American film about legendary characters who in life had already become somewhat mythic. And that's what this exceptional film is about. Recommended.


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