Most Popular
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Obama and Me
It was the year 2000, and I was a young, hungry reporter in Chicago with a young, hungry state legislator on my speed dial
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Death in the Inner Circle
Apparent murder-suicide cuts to the heart of the mayor's southern Dallas advisors
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Battle Against Teaching Evolution in Texas Begins
Should creationism win out, textbooks throughout the countrynot just Texaswill challenge the theory of evolution in science curricula
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After Their Murder-Suicide, Questions About Rufus and Lynn Flint Shaw's Shady Dealings Haunt Dallas
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Melodica Festival Self-Indulgent, But Still Positive for Dallas
If a festival happens in Exposition Park and only the built-in crowd shows, does it make a sound?
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Obama and Me (67)
It was the year 2000, and I was a young, hungry reporter in Chicago with a young, hungry state legislator on my speed dial
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Melodica Festival Self-Indulgent, But Still Positive for Dallas (51)
If a festival happens in Exposition Park and only the built-in crowd shows, does it make a sound?
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Ole Oops (58)
Popular prosperity preacher sues ABC and Trinity Foundation
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Murder at the Howard Johnson's Serves Up Flavorful Fare (27)
Also: Collin College kicks up heels with Li'l Abner and unfunny Nipples at Hub
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Pentecostal Preacher Sherman Allen Turns Out to Be Reverend Spanky (27)
The Fort Worth preacher is accused of beating, threatening and assaulting women for more than 20 years
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Will Ferrell Fouls Up Semi-Pro
Will Ferrell's umpteenth sports comedy is only half bad. His half.
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Heist Flick The Bank Job is Too Fun to Fact-Check
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The Games People Play
Michael Haneke and his brutal home invaders return to implicate you, again
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Gus Van Sant Returns to Disaffected Youth and Shoestring Budgets in Paranoid Park
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Not Taylor-Made
Owen Wilson's a bad fit for an ass-kicking bodyguard
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Putting the Local Farmer Back in Dallas Farmers Market
04:25PM 03/21/08 -
Bedhead, Now "More Than Ever"
03:46PM 03/21/08 -
With a New Song, Norah Jones' Big-Screen Bow Gets a Dallas Date
01:55PM 03/21/08 -
Good Friday: The Felons, Robert Gomez, Brent Best, Punk Bunny
05:52PM 03/21/08 -
Is MySpace Marring Band Mystique?
08:36AM 03/21/08 -
Meet Paul Ford, The Man Who Reviewed Half Of The Bands At SXSW -- Without Even Attending
02:52PM 03/20/08
What we are writing about
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Recent Articles By Andy Klein
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Neo Sparrin'
Keanu Reeves and the Wachowski brothers deliver a fresh helping of May tricks
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Hollow Man
Billy Bob comes close to nothingness in the curiously titled Levity
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Scot Free
When the boyfriend passes away, Morvern Callar may play
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Missing His Cue
Would-be auteur Mars Callahan stumbles on a Rocky road
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The King Is Dense
There's more to Stephen King's Dreamcatcher than will fit in its confusing adaptation
National Features
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Village Voice
A Long Way Wrong?
Another celebrated memoir threatens to blow into a million little pieces.
By Graham Rayman -
LA Weekly
Hoop Dawg
Billionaire Donald T. Sterling owns the L.A. Clippers and loves the ladies. And those are just two of his problems.
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Children of the Porn
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Westword
The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, they messed with the wrong coward.
By Joel Warner
Pitching Woo
There's a lot to love about Nicolas Cage in the WWII melodrama Windtalkers
By Andy Klein
Published: June 13, 2002The opening credit sequence of Windtalkers--a montage of Monument Valley--instantly invokes memories of the opening of John Woo's immediately previous film, Mission: Impossible 2, in which Tom Cruise was dangling off a rock. It is the last moment of similarity between the two.
Windtalkers is a World War II epic based on a fascinating and relatively obscure story from that war: In order to frustrate Japanese codebreakers, the U.S. Marines recruited 29 Navajo Indians to develop a code based on their language--a tongue that the Japanese were unlikely to identify, let alone have their own experts in. (Other Native American languages had been similarly used in World War I, though apparently to a lesser extent.) Eventually hundreds of Navajo "codetalkers" were employed as the backbone of communication in the Pacific war effort. It wasn't until 1968 that the code was declassified and the story emerged.
After a very brief introduction to codetalkers-to-be Ben Yahzee (Adam Beach) and Charlie Whitehorse (Roger Willie), we meet the movie's real protagonist, Sergeant Joe Enders (Nicolas Cage), in the midst of a chilling battle, during which his strict adherence to orders gets everyone under his command killed. Despite being haunted by this failure--or, perhaps, because of it--Enders is eager to get back into action, as though he will be able to atone next time around. But he's setting himself up for an even worse situation: The superior officers love the fact that Enders insisted on enforcing military discipline, even when it was the wrong move. So they assign him as Ben Yahzee's baby sitter, charged with protecting the code first and Yahzee second. That is, Enders' boss makes it clear that, if capture seems imminent, Enders should kill Yahzee himself rather than risk the latter's being tortured and giving up the code. Sergeant "Ox" Henderson (Christian Slater), Charlie Whitehorse's escort, is given the same orders. (Would such orders be given so blithely if the codetalkers were white? The film never really approaches this issue.)
Historically, there doesn't seem to be any evidence that such a policy existed, but it sets up the perfect emotional/moral conflict for the already tormented Enders. Last time Enders followed orders, all his friends got killed. This time he's being asked to commit a more active sin of commission, even though the notion of killing another Marine is anathema to him.
He does his best to be even more of a cold son of a bitch than might be his nature, to avoid bonding with Yahzee, but Yahzee is too likable a guy for Enders to hold out forever.
Always a brilliant technician, Woo has, in Windtalkers, applied his skills to a handsome production, with several battle scenes of nearly unbearable tension. Yet in many ways, Windtalkers feels like he's playing against his strengths. For a start, fans of the sort of beautifully choreographed and edited action sequences that catapulted Woo to fame will find very little of that here. War films, as a genre, are less conducive to aesthetically pleasing, slo-mo shootouts and stunts than urban gangster movies. The director is more constrained here by realism. In fact, it might have seemed downright offensive to use his dynamic, multiple-speed action montage style here.
Woo's best films are also marked by an unabashed earnestness and melodrama. This one has that in spades. Unfortunately, in a World War II setting, we've seen it too many times before--Windtalkers reprises all the old standards, like the guy with his wife's picture in his hat, who might as well have a big "kill me" sign painted on his back in fluorescent orange. The over-the-top sincerity that is so rewarding in Face/Off (1998), Woo's best American film, feels too clichéd in this more conventional context.
Having said that, the movie does develop a real wallop by the end, driven largely by Cage's performance. As usual, Cage seems possessed in his role. (Slater, no stranger to excess himself, plays it straight, functioning as a more approachable figure of identification, as he did in Broken Arrow.) The rest of the cast is reasonably effective, although, as Enders' commander, the usually wonderful Peter Stormare sports an accent that is both distracting and, at times, nearly incomprehensible.
Par for the course, it seems as though a major studio couldn't quite bring itself to tell this sort of story strictly from the Native American point of view rather than making it mostly about the white guy. As strong as Enders' thematic material is, there is a second story going on here--the feelings of the Navajos, who are painfully aware of their second-class status, even as they bend over backward and get themselves killed trying to prove just what good citizens they are. We get some of that story, and at moments Beach and Cage seem almost to be given equal emotional weight. But only at moments.








