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3:10 to Yuma

Rated - 3.5 stars

3:10 to Yuma

Trains play a key role in several important Westerns, including John Ford's silent epic The Iron Horse, High Noon (which is when the gunmen shooting for Gary Cooper are due in town), and Once Upon a Time in the West.

In 3:10 to Yuma (first filmed with Van Heflin and Glenn Ford in 1958), the title refers to the train which will transport Ben Wade (Russell Crowe) to the state penitentiary. Only problem being, even in handcuffs Wade is none too cooperative, and there's every chance his gang of desperados will attempt to free him from his captors.

It's a strange fight for a rancher to get mixed up in. But Dan Evans (Christian Bale) desperately needs the reward money. He's crippled with debt, and crippled physically, too, a war wound from the times gone by. Offered $200 to put Wade on the train, he strikes out with a makeshift posse that includes a veterinarian (Alan Tudyk), a wounded Pinkerton's operative (Peter Fonda) and a railway representative (Dallas Roberts).

Their chances hinge on a ploy to send Wade's gang on a wild goose chase in the wrong direction. But the plan only buys them some time. Meanwhile the imperturbable outlaw is slowly but surely evening the odds, killing two men and whittling away at the others' piece of mind.

Crowe plays Wade very gently. He's a man utterly at ease with himself, commanding and confident no matter that he spends much of the picture in chains. He's charming but utterly ruthless.

By contrast, Christian Bale's rancher is still striving to prove something, to his contemptuous teenage boy (Logan Lerman), and to himself. He may occupy the moral high ground, but most often he's the one picking himself out of the dust.

3:10 to Yuma

Adapted from an early short story by Elmore Leonard, 3:10 to Yuma strikes a fair balance between physical action and psychological warfare, but always at its core is the question of how we are to measure these two men.

Director James Mangold has made this film before ' or one very like it. The police thriller Copland was basically a Western in New Jersey, with Sylvester Stallone as the honest, inadequate small town sheriff and Harvey Keitel as the corrupt, capable NYPD detective. In these two movies, integrity is another kind of handicap.

3:10 to Yuma is the better of the two. The story is more muscular and direct, and the shading is more artful. The picture topped the US box office charts for a couple of weeks earlier this month ' a considerable achievement for a Western, and a tribute to the combined drawing power of Messrs Crowe and Bale, two of our best actors. (In a shrewdly cast film, Peter Fonda and rising star Ben Foster also make strong impressions.)

3:10 to Yuma

Even so, Mangold has a job creating a satisfying, redemptive resolution. If the ending works it's on the basis that these two very different men recognize and respond to an unlikely kinship; the shame of a father; the pain of a son. Is that enough to redeem a killer? I didn't believe it but I wanted to. I suspect James Mangold would say the same.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Trevor Johnston, Time Out

Times are tough at the ranch for hobbled Civil War vet Christian Bale, a man powerless to stop his drought... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 1 starbrokeback mountain had tougher cowboys than this film

A customer from Kent , 18/02/2008

1 not a western

2 badly acted

3 russel crowe played a soft outlaw who was sensitive and caring.

4 any action was overcome by the strange story line

  129 out of 145 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 stars3:10 To Yuma

SAI81 from Tonbridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 14/10/2007

Few things make me more concerned for the future of cinema than the all-pervasive trend for remakes currently sweeping Hollywood. Okay so there’s the odd good one but for every Dawn of the Dead there’s a Black Christmas, and a Hitcher, a Fog and… you get the point. So we arrive at the question of what the hell I’m doing at the screening of a remake, of a Western (a genre I’ve no time for) or indeed at a film starring Russell Crowe (who, LA Confidential aside, I’ve never liked in a movie, ever). I can’t really give you an answer other than ‘It was what was on’ but I’m glad I did sit down for this one, as it was one of the biggest and best surprises that 2007 has yet offered up at the movies.

This is an old fashioned oater, drawn from a short story by Elmore Leonard.

Crowe plays Ben Wade, an outlaw finally captured and headed to the titular train for transportation to prison and then the gallows. Bale is Dan Evans, a farmer who volunteers to join the party escorting Wade because he needs the reward money to keep his land. The party make their two-day journey, pursued by Wade’s gang now led by Charlie Prince (Foster).

Christian Bale is one of the most versatile actors in the world right now and even when he’s in a film I’m not overly keen on Bale is always good value. 3:10 provides his best performance in a good while. He reveals Dan slowly, building each new scrap of information into a complex, real and utterly compelling character. Crowe is also excellent. I’ve been used to seeing him coast but here he brings real progression to Wade’s character. The scripted change in the man could easily have been forced but Crowe makes it feel organic and his chemistry with Bale works beautifully, giving the film a rock solid centre.

Among a clutch of great supporting performances it is well worth singling out Ben Foster’s sociopathic Charlie Prince. I only previously know Foster from the guiltiest of pleasures; Get Over It so to see him disappear behind an untidy beard and create one of the out and out scariest, most hateable screen villains of recent times was a real shock. It’s a career maker. There’s also nice work from 15-year-old Logan Lerman as Bale’s son.

Mangold, together with his regular cinematographer Phedon Papamichael, has created a great looking film. There’s a dirty realism to everything even as the film captures the gorgeous locations. It’s kinetic too, the action beats come pretty thick and fast and are varied, exciting and visceral. There are stand out moments right from the start when a robbery establishes that Ben Wade is not one of those villains with a well hidden heart of gold to the near unbearably tense final shootout as Dan escorts Wade to the 3:10 to Yuma. This is the antithesis of Shoot ‘Em Up. Everyone that dies here is a real person, each bullet has consequences and the business of killing is never fun.

3:10 To Yuma is a great film, and yet more evidence that James Mangold is a consistent talent who is able to bring expertise to just about any genre.

  79 out of 85 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsThe Western is back..with a bang (well several actually).

PaulaWestwood from Ashton-Under-Lyne [Highly rated reviewer] , 16/09/2007

Not since Clint and Eli Wallach wore chaps has there been a better cowie film, I'm saddle sore just from the seat edge action watching this. In any case, regardless of it being a western, this is a really good story, an excellent chase, and a superb shoot em up. To be honest my partner doesn't like westerns, but thought this was a really great film, it is definately worth a watch. In addition Christian Bale and Russel Crowe are on top of their game, and must definately be a couple of the best screen actors around right now. l would saddle up and ride to dodge if you have to, to catch this one.

  39 out of 42 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 2 starsAlmost

Adrian McMahon from London , 06/02/2008

First up, I can't really fault the acting at all, Christian Bale delivers probably the best performance in this film, letting his character develop slowly into a fully rounded character. Even Russell Crowe is a lot more restrained than some of his other films, and is probably the best performance I've seen him deliver since LA Confidential. I really wanted to like this film, but it ended with me feeling very underwhelmed by it all. It has all the ingredients to make a near perfect film, but somehow manages to throw away all the tension and character development in the last 15 minutes. It just doesn't equal the sum of it's parts. A seriously missed opportunity to make a great film, which is probably why I've marked it so harshly.

I'd recommend watching nevertheless and making your own mind up.

  24 out of 24 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsREMEMBER THE DAYS WHEN TRAINS TURNED UP?

Norman Barry from Surrey, England. [Highly rated reviewer] , 23/06/2008

I'm not a 'western' fan particularly, so approached this with caution, buoyed by the presence of Bale (I am contractually obliged to tout him, again, as a future Bond. Although I can't help thinking he'd turn it down). A standard western, plods along whilst exploring the good guy's family tensions, then goes nuts at the end. Bale is, as always, excellent. Crowe puts in a good performance, but turns into Mel 'Riggs' Gibson towards the end. It's good enough, but I'd like to see how it compares to the original (I missed it on TV a few months ago).

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsstunning!!! crowe at his best

klievert from Wirral , 01/06/2008

no other way to describe it - brilliant!!!!!

it is everything you would expect from such a talanted cast: russel crowe- absolutley superb, it is his first film since gladiator were he has benn flawless. and as for christian bale , it was great to see him away from playing batman and what a change! he is just fantastic in this film- flawless. i also want to mention it is brilliantly directed and casted.

the best western film i hav seen in a long long while!

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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