Plots(1)

A Civil War veteran who travels from town to town reading the news undertakes a perilous journey across Texas to deliver an orphaned girl to a new home. (Netflix)

Videos (5)

Trailer 4

Reviews (11)

D.Moore 

all reviews of this user

English A beautiful film full of important ideas. Tom Hanks can't even do it any other way, and so once again he acts great and the western environment suits him very much. Paul Greengrass kind of gave up on being Paul Greengrass and pops his head up only a few times, but that’s fine, because the story is told one hundred percent skillfully, and however much the final quarter hour can be predicted, it affected me exactly as they planned. If you (didn't) like the slightly more melancholy The Homesman with Tommy Lee Jones, expect the same from News of the World. ()

Kaka 

all reviews of this user

English A Greengrass film that doesn’t feel it was directed by him. A slow, deliberate and down-to-earth western where not much happens or is said. The main idea is appealing, the interaction between the two main characters is decent, but there is no sensation. A more restrained and focused version of the post-apocalyptic The Postman with Costner wanting it all and we know how that turned out. ()

Ads

POMO 

all reviews of this user

English This tranquil western road movie may not have a substantial dramatic plot, but it does have a humanistic heart. Simply Hanks. Its aim is to again show the slightly different corners and characters of the old American West and its code of justice and hardships in a more realistic way than Costner’s The Postman :-). But Greegrasse’s touch isn’t very apparent in it. Did she really direct it? James N. Howard’s return to the genre is nice, but due to the film’s minimalist approach, we can’t fully enjoy it until the closing credits. ()

agentmiky 

all reviews of this user

English I can imagine this could have been a real western hit, especially with Netflix making it accessible to a wide audience. Unfortunately, it didn’t turn out that way, which is a shame because the names behind this project promised much more! With Paul Greengrass directing and writing, James Newton Howard composing, Dariusz Wolski on cinematography, and Tom Hanks as the lead, it had a strong lineup. It’s surprising that Howard came out the best of the bunch; his soundtrack balanced well between building tension (during shootouts and desert storms) and calm moments, with a nearly melancholic touch. While the film’s beautiful scenery helped, the plot seemed rather sterile. I didn’t feel that the bond between Hanks and the little girl progressed to a higher level during those two hours; True Grit does this much better. It does have its moments (the ending is satisfying), but as a whole, it doesn’t measure up to the best genre pieces. For me, it’s 6.5/10. ()

lamps 

all reviews of this user

English Yes, News of the World is certainly an interesting movie and no, it’s not a western in the strict sense of the word. Even Once Upon a Time in the West wasn’t a western proper, it was a movie that deconstructed the classic world of the tough cowboys of the wild west adding modernity at the thematic and formal levelS. Compared to it, Greengrass’s movie has an editing that gives the impression of a much faster pace than the story actually has. And although westerns mostly aim at a clear cliffhanger, while the secondary themes around the coexistence with the Indians or the railway are subordinated to the narrative, this one goes in circles that are only apparently separated by historical events (the Civil War, which may have abolished slavery, but without changing anything in the minds of the Southerners), from which the main characters try to escape – move forward. And in my opinion, this movie also pushes forward the possibility of thinking about the “Western”, which hasn’t been a strictly defined genre for a long time, as some sort of field of free expression for talented directors to add their own historical reflection and author’s formal concepts, which in this case is certainly refreshing and stimulating. It’s a film that doesn’t submit to it (like even Once Upon a Time in the West back then), but that conceptually rewrites it, and it has my full admiration. 90% ()

Gallery (20)