USA action
1985
color 132 min.
Director: Lawrence Kasdan
CAV: out-of-print collectible
           3 discs, catalog # CC1228L
CLV: $59.95 - available
           2 discs, catalog # CC1229L
The following
notes are by Mark Kasdan, co-writer and associate producer of
Silverado. Albert Camus wrote that a person's lifework may
be "nothing but a long journey to find again, by all the detours of
art, the two or three powerful images on which his whole being opened
for the first time." Those images came to me in Western movies. From
childhood my brother, Lawrence Kasdan, and I shared a love of those
pictures. We weren't alone. When he decided to write and direct a
Western, people flocked to participate, both in front of and behind
the camera. Most of them fell into one of two groups: those who had
made many Westerns when many Westerns were being made, and those who
were eager for their first opportunity. Nobody was cooly indifferent
to the chance to shape some of those dynamic images.
It was a large
but remarkably harmonious team; there was a warmth amongst us that
neutralized the chill of filming straight through the winter at 7,000
feet. It may seem irrelevant to a viewer of our work, years later,
that we had an unforgettably good time, but I'm convinced that our
pleasure seeped into the scenes and permeated every frame.
Crystalline landscapes of snow, infinitely varied earth tones, and the
celebrated light of Santa Fe, New Mexico, lent their real beauty to
our imaginary world. That beauty is particularly well served in this
presentation: the original wide-screen format, the inherent quality of
laserdisc reproduction, and a new transfer supervised by the film's
director of photography.
Set in the 1880s, the story finds four men
headed for the town of Silverado. Thrown together by their adventures
on the trail -- ambushes, a jail break and posse chase, a wagon train
of settlers stranded by an outlaw gang -- they try to go their
separate ways, especially after they reach the town. But Silverado
holds not safety but danger, a threat that only their combined
strength can challenge. Watched by the women (and a young boy) who
love them, the men confront their enemies, from a thundering gun
battle in the midst of a stampede, to a hushed, face-to-face,
fast-draw showdown.
In Silverado, we set out to create a
West filled with a sense of potential, where an intricate plot would
draw together a cast of charismatic figures. We sought at every turn
to infuse those characters with the delicious humor unique to heroes
of high adventure. But a surprising amount of the emotion in the story
comes from family connections -- whether blood relationships or the
spiritual ties of loners who find themselves in allegiance. That
familial emphasis is Silverado's special gift to audiences of
all ages, but there is a general standard to measure against. To take
a place in the great tradition of the genre, to approach those potent,
formative images Camus wrote of, a Western must depict at least one
hero who cuts a certain kind of figure. Let me explain.
Like all
period films, Westerns have always had two kinds of meaning. First,
they show us a little about the historical West. Whatever the
oversimplifications or stereotypes of the film frontier, there is
always some connection to the real frontier, a place famously
significant in our national psyche. More important, the physical
texture of the past is represented with an essential fidelity that
delights us all. The weather, the landscapes, the horses have not been
altered by the passage of a hundred years. I operated an extra tape
recorder during the big scene of the wagon train crossing the Rio
Grande. My job was to catch the clatter of horses' hooves and
iron-rimmed, wooden wagon wheels on river cobbles, water rushing in
the background. Suddenly it came to me with a shock that while this
was a re-creation of a pioneer river crossing, it was also a real
river crossing, that the sounds I heard were exactly what they must
have been then -- none of the elements have changed.
Human nature is
also unchanged, and this is the second kind of meaning, the secret of
the continued popularity of films set in other times. Freed of the
confusing, conflicting details of current events, we are able to see
universal issues dramatized and resolved. Friendship and loyalty,
honor and justice, freedom in living and courage in facing death -- in
Westerns, these matters are seen plainly, unobscured by the specifics
in which they are wrapped in our daily lives.
Trying to understand
the enduring power of these movies, I found a cogent explanation in
Robert Warshow's essay, "Movie Chronicle: The Westerner." Warshow
discerned the significance of the essential Western hero: a man who
wears a gun on his hip as a sign of complete responsibility for his
own life and death, a reminder of the reponsibility we all bear. Good
and evil existed in the Old West, of course. But we care only because
they also exist today. The Western hero is a compulsively watchable
figure, timeless despite his cowboy gear. He confronts for us the
choice that can be honorable or not and shows us how to comport
ourselves in the extreme circumstances that frighten and fascinate
us. It gives us pleasure to watch him ride fast and punch hard and, if
necessary, shoot straight. But he lives on because it gives us
something we need more than pleasure to watch him live gracefully and
act honorably and, if necessary, die bravely.
-- MARK
KASDAN
Credits
Produced and Directed by: Lawrence
Kasdan
Written by: Lawrence Kasdan, Mark Kasdan
Executive
Producers: Charles Okun, Michael Grillo
Director of Photography:
John Bailey
Production Design: Ida Random
Editor: Carol
Littleton
Music: Bruce Broughton
Costume Design: Kristi
Zea
Associate Producer: Mark Kasdan
Casting: Wally
Nicita
Transfer
This edition of Silverado was
trans-
ferred digitally from an original 35mm interpositive in the
correct widescreen aspect ratio of 2.35:1. The soundtrack was mastered
from a 35mm magnetic track.