Dead Man's Burden
Dead Man's Burden is a 2012 Western film directed by Jared Moshe. The film premiered on June 16, 2012, at the Los Angeles Film Festival and stars Barlow Jacobs and Clare Bowen as two siblings that reunite over the death of their father and a potential sale of their land. PlotMartha and her husband Heck are two hardy settlers trying to survive in New Mexico after the end of the Civil War and the death of Martha's father. They're given hope for a better life when a mining company shows interest in purchasing their homestead, but things become tense when Martha's brother Wade, who defected to the Union Army returns home after hearing of their father's death – unaware that Martha herself was the one who brought about his demise. Cast
ProductionWhen writing the script for Dead Man's Burden, Moshe wrote with the intent to cast the film with lesser known actors, as he didn't want "to bring in a big-name actor who didn’t look like they belong in that period."[1] Moshe did not use storyboards, as the film had a tight budget and couldn't afford a storyboard artist, instead watching other Western films for inspiration and working closely with cinematographer Robert Hauer.[1] Filming took place in New Mexico over an 18-day period, where the cast experienced freak storms that forced the cast to walk to the set but did not delay filming.[1] ReceptionOn Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 74% based on reviews from 19 critics.[2] On Metacritic the film has a score of 76% based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[3] Common elements praised in the film was Moshé's choice in cast, which Variety lauded as a highlight.[4] In their mostly positive review IndieWire remarked that the lack of major stars and the choice to film a Western (which they saw as a "mostly defunct genre") could jeopardize commercial prospects.[5] The New York Daily News's review was more mixed, as they felt that the "verbose period film has the complicated plot and tight pacing of a cable TV drama, which is then squashed into an indie-film paradigm."[6] References
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