Skip to Content

Exclusive: Rock Band Unplugged Track List

ShotgunStories Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Indies on DVD: 'Buckle Brothers,' 'Shotgun Stories,' 'August the First'

Filed under: Documentary », Drama », New on DVD », Home Entertainment », Cinematical Indie »

Ride 'em, cowboy! My pick of the week, Marquette Williams' Buckle Brothers, is not like any other Western you've seen. For one thing, it's a documentary. For another, it's about four young people from the mean streets of South Central Los Angeles and Compton, California, trying to make it on the modern-day Bill Pickett Rodeo circuit. They're an engaging, tenacious group, determined to rise above their surroundings and achieve something on their own -- and they love horses like nobody's business. The doc is compassionate but unflinching in showing the young bull riders' triumphs and failures. It's the antithesis of slick filmmaking.

The DVD is available from Indican Pictures. The film's official site has a gallery, trailer, and details on the featured riders: Lil Ron, Yah-Ya, Jazz and Mike. Director Williams and producer Marcus Franklin made the doc while working day jobs; the doc is truly a labor of love. The two filmmakers recently completed the thriller Unspeakable.

"Writer-director Jeff Nichols's Shotgun Stories is a tale of the South -- the flat fields and summer heat of Arkansas, where people struggle with the past every day," wrote James Rocchi in his review. "At heart, [it's] a film about people who discover what they have to let go of, and who confront the terrifying possibility of hope."

Jeffrey M. Anderson was slightly less enamored, but still quite complimentary of this tale of two families (with the same recently-deceased father) who come into conflict. Liberation Entertainment's DVD includes an audio commentary with Nichols, an audio track containing the isolated score by the band Lucero, production stills, and trailers. The film's official site has a trailer, stills, cast and crew information, and more.

After the jump: a family drama, and a John Sayles classic finally emerges.

Review: Shotgun Stories - Jeffrey's Take

Filed under: Drama », New Releases », Theatrical Reviews », New in Theaters », Cinematical Indie »

A man sits on his bed in the half-light, shirtless. On his back is a series of little bumps, perhaps scars, possibly cigarette burns, or buckshot wounds? His co-workers at the fish hatchery take secret bets as to their origin. But for Son Hayes (Michael Shannon), they are part of a hurtful past, one that he is forever trying to get beyond. Son's name, as well as those of his brothers, Kid (Barlow Jacobs) and Boy (Douglas Ligon), no doubt came from their awful father, a kind of branding that they can never escape. We never meet this father. He dies at the beginning of Shotgun Stories. Son, Kid and Boy attend his funeral, and that's when the trouble starts. If not for that, life in this Arkansas small town probably would have gone on as always, with Kid sleeping in a tent in Son's backyard, with Boy living out of his van, and with the three of them getting together for beers. (There is a lot of beer drinking in this movie.)

SF Indiefest Review: Shotgun Stories

Filed under: Drama », Independent », Theatrical Reviews », Festival Reports », Cinematical Indie »



"Oh, I wish I was in the land of cotton/Old times there are not forgotten." -- "Dixie Land"

And that can cut both ways; writer-director Jeff Nichols's Shotgun Stories is a tale of the South -- the flat fields and summer heat of Arkansas, where people struggle with the past every day. We first meet Son Hayes (Michael Shannon) as he struggles out of bed, his back marked by scars; years ago, Son took a shotgun blast, lived, lived with it. Son's brother Kid (Barlow Jacobs) lives in a tent in Son's yard; their other brother Boy (Douglas Ligon) lives out of his van. They get by, working at the fish farm or coaching high school basketball. And then they're told their father has died. Years ago, their father quit drinking, found Jesus, put his life right -- but not for them. He has a whole separate family, one that knew the man he became; for Son, Kid and Boy, reconciling that fact with the man they knew is a hard thing to do. And maybe they don't want to, when it comes down to it.

Produced by David Gordon Green (All the Real Girls, Snow Angels) Shotgun Stories is another piece of a distinct thread of storytelling that's been running through American independent film for several years now (one which, not coincidentally, Green's also explored in his work). Shotgun Stories is a piece of hardscrabble Southern minimalism, one that wrenches strong drama out of the everyday, set in places where the landscapes are wide open but people's feelings are tightly closed. Son, Kid and Boy go to the funeral to have their say, not to praise their father but to bury him, and their insistence that their pain be remembered part and parcel with his new family's pain at his loss spirals into anger and then into violence.
 
.