Mike Blueberry is such a wayward youngster that he’s sent West to be whipped into manhood by his uncle.
On his first night in his new home, Blueberry sneaks into town to visit a lovely lady of the night (Vahina Giocante), who makes him a man in a totally different way.
But a fast gun named Wallace “Wally” Sebastian Blount (Michael Madsen) has already put his brand on this whore. And he stops by while Blueberry and Madeleine are basking in the afterglow of their recent coupling.
By the time the ensuing confrontation ends, Madeleine is dead with a bullet to the head. Blueberry has leaped out the window of the saloon, a bullet lodged in his shoulder. And the saloon is ablaze from a lamp knocked over in the gunplay.
Indians rescue and raise Blueberry, teaching his their ways and their mystical powers.
Years later, he’s a lawman in a town near the Indian’s sacred mountains. The whites have heard those mountains are filled with gold and are looking for any reason to enter them.
That includes rancher Greg Sullivan, whose daughter Maria has her eye on Blueberry.
And that includes an old acquaintance of Blueberry’s — Blount, who just happens to show up in town as well.
Unless you like you’re Western chock full of witch doctor mumbo, jumbo, this will likely strike you as an interesting failure. For long stretches, director Kounen treats us to special effect images of what look like insects and monsters swirling across the screen as characters battle for possession of their souls.
The “Western” portions of the movie, on the other hand, are very well filmed and acted, though Vincent Cassel certainly doesn’t have the appearance of the heroic type.
Michael Madsen, who would eventually rent himself out for cameos in some absolutely awful Westerns, is effective here as the villain.
The film also features one of the best character names in recent Westerns. Ernest Borgnine plays a wheelchair-bound, shotgun-toting deputy. He’s known as Rolling Star.
Geoffrey Lewis and Juliette Lewis play father and daughter in this film, just as they are in real life. Juliette earned an Oscar nomination in 1991 for her role as Danielle Bowden in “Cape Fear,” which starred Robert DeNiro. She also starred in the controversial Oliver Stone film, “Natural Born Killers.”
Directed by:
Jan Kounen
Cast:
Vincent Cassel .. Mike Blueberry
Juliette Lewis … Maria Sullivan
Michael Madsen … Wallace Sebastian Blount
Temuera Morrison … Runi
Ernest Borgnine … Rolling Star
Colm Meaney … Jimmy McClure
Hugh O’Conor … Young Mike Blueberry
Geoffrey Lewis … Greg Sullivan
Kateri Walker … Kateri
Vahina Giocante … Madeleine
Eddie Izzard … Prosit
Djimon Hounsou … Woodhead
aka:
Blueberry
Score:
Jean-Jacques Hertz
Francois Roy
Runtime: 124 min.
Memorable lines:
Wallace Sebastian to Indian girl Runi: “Don’t be afraid. I don’t kill animals.”
Sebastian: “Animals are beasts. But men are monsters.”
Found your site – and immediately bookmarked it – after searching for more info on Vincent Cassel in this film.
Fantastic site! Thanks so much for what you’ve put together here. An amazing accomplishment!
And for the record – I do, in fact, love my westerns “chock full of witch doctor mumbo, jumbo” which is why I enjoyed Renegade so much.
Thanks again!
I found the effects a bit much so I was able to ff through them. I wondered why Blout’s character died and the protagonist pulled through. Did I miss something or was it a battle of will or something?