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![]() 'The Newton Boys' Successfully Goes Against All Conventional Notions Of Morality. By Stacey Richter RICHARD LINKLATER HAS finally abandoned the niche he's carved for himself as the director of hip little movies about alienated white kids. With The Newton Boys, he's left behind a string of coming-of-age films like Slacker, SubUrbia, and Before Sunrise (which all take place during 24 hour time periods) and voyaged into the comparatively unhip territory of history. As it turns out, Linklater actually can make a movie that spans more than one day, with characters who are not wearing ripped jeans, and he can do it well. With The Newton Boys, Linklater shows that he's not just a good, young director. He's a good director.
The Newton Boys were a real-life gang of bank robbers who approached their calling as if it were an ordinary profession. Their strong Puritan work ethic earned them the slogan "the most successful bank robbers in American history," and they never did much jail time for their crimes. The movie portrays them as a group of Teen Beat cowboys with chiseled cheek bones and sunny dispositions. The eldest, Willis (Matthew McConaughey), decides to devote his life to crime and persuades his brothers to join him, which they do after a little prodding. Then they drive around in flashy, '20s clothing, robbing banks at night, with explosives--none of this stick-'em up crap--and face relatively few obstacles. The interesting thing about both the movie (and the history of the Newton Boys) is that it seems to go against all conventional notions of morality, not to mention common sense. For these brothers, crime does pay. They make bank robbing look like a nifty idea, and the risks seem small in proportion to the payoff. The actors who portray the criminals are notoriously good-looking young men: Skeet Ulrich, Ethan Hawke, and Vincent D'Onofrio round out the cast; and they all have pleasant, if rascally, personalities. The dialogue in this movie has the glib smoothness of a forgettable Hollywood classic. Nothing sticks out or sounds awkward, but nothing really shines, either. The combined effect of all this smooth handsomeness is like stepping into a heated swimming pool--it's just...pleasant. With this calm background, Linklater confirms what we've always suspected: Nice boys can be sociopaths, too.
This portrayal of the Newton brothers as blessed and protected
golden boys would probably be annoying if it weren't at least
somewhat true. It seems they really didn't kill anybody, or deprive
widows of their life savings. To shore up his point of view, Linklater
wisely includes clips from TV interviews with a couple of the
real Newton Boys at the end of the film (one with Johnny Carson).
They come off as a couple of charming old cowboys. Watching them,
it seems entirely plausible that they did stumble into a life
of crime with no true malice in their hearts. What could be cuter
than an 80-year-old reformed gangster?
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