As pictured here, the real-life clan of bank robbers who were active during the post
WWI-period and known as the Newton Boys were down-home Texas farmboys just looking
to grab themselves some of the Twenties roar before it left them in the dust. A lovingly
recreated period piece, The Newton Boys covers a five-year span from 1919-1924 during
which time the gang had the dubious distinction of being the country's most successful
group of bank robbers, capping their careers with a mail-train robbery whose estimated
$3 million haul was the largest theft of its kind to date. Part Western, part crime
story, and part true family saga, The Newton Boys blurs the standard generic boundaries
in its quest to tell a uniquely American story about the ambitions of society's have-nots
and the quiet passage of eras. Indeed the film opens up with an old-timey iris-out
shot that recalls the look of movies from the early decades of the century, and concludes
in marked contrast with a mesmerizing coda of actual documentary footage that includes
the last of the siblings chatting up Johnny Carson amid the glitz of a 1980 Tonight
Show appearance. All in all, the gang was an honorable bunch who never killed anyone,
and their story tells more about the rationalizations these bank robbers make for
their chosen profession, the ways in which technology advances in counterpoint to
new criminal methodologies, and the ominous portents of corrupt justice systems and
celebrity trials of the future. The themes are undeniably rich and they seize our
imagination to a much greater degree than the characters themselves. The actors are
all excellent (McConaughey delivers his best work to date, Ulrich and Hawke both
shine, Yoakam is a break-out revelation -- of the gang, only the usually remarkable
D'Onofrio seems less vivid than we might ordinarily expect); they seem believable
as brothers (except, of course, for Yoakam, who plays Brent Glasscock, the nitroglycerin
expert and squirrely Fifth Beatle to the four Newton brothers). As characters however,
these figures just don't seem to have enough meat on their bones to sustain our interest
beyond the two hours it takes for the movie to run its course. Each character has
a couple of traits to play but never emerges as a fully developed person. The women
in the story (played by Margulies and Webb) fare worse, having little to do but play
the "love interest." Nevertheless, The Newton Boys sparks to life in numerous other
ways -- in its attention to period detail, in its elegant camerawork, in segments
such as the breathtaking centerpiece montage that recounts a string of bank robberies,
in the beguiling music score, and in the closing courtroom scenes that give a sense
of the gang's interaction with regular folks and the institutions of state. What
The Newton Boys lacks in dramatic definition, it more than compensates for with its
underlying intelligence and visual luster.
3.5 stars
--Marjorie Baumgarten
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