Tras luchar en la Guerra Civil, dos amigos del Ejército de la Unión se encuentran en lados opuestos de la ley, con la paz de la posguerra en peligro.Tras luchar en la Guerra Civil, dos amigos del Ejército de la Unión se encuentran en lados opuestos de la ley, con la paz de la posguerra en peligro.Tras luchar en la Guerra Civil, dos amigos del Ejército de la Unión se encuentran en lados opuestos de la ley, con la paz de la posguerra en peligro.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Brian F. Durkin
- Blackjack
- (as Brian Durkin)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Why do people expect perfect acting and perfect editing to tell a good story?
The acting was good enough and the editing was okay, but the story was really good.
It was also great seeing a movie without the gratuitous sex and foul language.
Well worth the time spent to enjoy a good story about good men dealing with a bad situation.
The acting was good enough and the editing was okay, but the story was really good.
It was also great seeing a movie without the gratuitous sex and foul language.
Well worth the time spent to enjoy a good story about good men dealing with a bad situation.
Wasn't a bad movie. Subtitles kept distracting me from the story. Wasn't able to turn them off.
While the 2020 Western movie "The Warrant" certainly wasn't an outstanding or particularly outstanding movie in the Western genre, then it should be said that it was actually watchable enough for what it turned out to be.
It was nice to see the likes of Neal McDonough and Casper Van Dien in this movie, and I must admit that it was also what drew me in to watching this 2020 movie from writer Shea Sizemore and director Brent Christy. Well, also because the movie's synopsis mentioned the American Civil War.
The storyline in "The Warrant" was fairly straight forward, albeit somewhat on the generic and mundane side of the equation though. It was a shame, because the storyline sort of kept the movie back and prevented it from being more than it turned out to be. But that being as it might be, then the movie wasn't boring or anything, it was actually good enough and adequately entertaining, it just wasn't something that stood out from many other similar Westerns.
Neal McDonough was actually rather nicely cast for the role of John Breaker and he fit the character quite nicely, selling his character in a very believable manner with his performance. And Gregory Cruz, playing Bugle, was also a great addition to the movie, and given his performance I feel it was a shame that he didn't have more on screen time, because he added a lot of flavor to the movie. And while Casper Van Dien wasn't a bad choice for the movie, I just didn't enjoy his performance, walking around with a constant scowl, as if having a case of really bad indigestion.
"The Warrant" definitely is watchable, and it had potential to be something greater than what it turned out to be. However, this particular Western just failed to bring anything outstanding to the genre, and as such it ended up being mundane and ultimately a very forgettable movie.
My rating of the 2020 movie "The Warrant" lands on a mediocre five out of ten stars.
It was nice to see the likes of Neal McDonough and Casper Van Dien in this movie, and I must admit that it was also what drew me in to watching this 2020 movie from writer Shea Sizemore and director Brent Christy. Well, also because the movie's synopsis mentioned the American Civil War.
The storyline in "The Warrant" was fairly straight forward, albeit somewhat on the generic and mundane side of the equation though. It was a shame, because the storyline sort of kept the movie back and prevented it from being more than it turned out to be. But that being as it might be, then the movie wasn't boring or anything, it was actually good enough and adequately entertaining, it just wasn't something that stood out from many other similar Westerns.
Neal McDonough was actually rather nicely cast for the role of John Breaker and he fit the character quite nicely, selling his character in a very believable manner with his performance. And Gregory Cruz, playing Bugle, was also a great addition to the movie, and given his performance I feel it was a shame that he didn't have more on screen time, because he added a lot of flavor to the movie. And while Casper Van Dien wasn't a bad choice for the movie, I just didn't enjoy his performance, walking around with a constant scowl, as if having a case of really bad indigestion.
"The Warrant" definitely is watchable, and it had potential to be something greater than what it turned out to be. However, this particular Western just failed to bring anything outstanding to the genre, and as such it ended up being mundane and ultimately a very forgettable movie.
My rating of the 2020 movie "The Warrant" lands on a mediocre five out of ten stars.
I've seen amateur civil war reenactment gatherings by retirees being filmed by a 5th grade great-grandson turn out better than this film.
Shea Sizemore's writing experience in short films should've kept this screenplay as a short, instead of this terribly written with lame dialogued poor excuse of a western with comic relief 85 min mess. Even for an 85 min runtime film, the slow pacing and lack of any real unpredictable story made this film feel like 3 hours. Add to that the overbearing and annoying score, and you'll be pulling your hair out.
All actors seemed to act is if they were in a stage play, looking out to no where and overcompensating their lines, it almost felt like a parody.
This is experienced Camera and Electrical Department turned newb director Brent Christy's third film, and it really shows. He failed in directing his cast, proper camera angles and settings.
The cinematography and colors were the only redeeming qualities in this film. Watch the trailer, and you've seen this film. This has to be the worst western I've ever seen. It's a very generous 3/10 from me.
Shea Sizemore's writing experience in short films should've kept this screenplay as a short, instead of this terribly written with lame dialogued poor excuse of a western with comic relief 85 min mess. Even for an 85 min runtime film, the slow pacing and lack of any real unpredictable story made this film feel like 3 hours. Add to that the overbearing and annoying score, and you'll be pulling your hair out.
All actors seemed to act is if they were in a stage play, looking out to no where and overcompensating their lines, it almost felt like a parody.
This is experienced Camera and Electrical Department turned newb director Brent Christy's third film, and it really shows. He failed in directing his cast, proper camera angles and settings.
The cinematography and colors were the only redeeming qualities in this film. Watch the trailer, and you've seen this film. This has to be the worst western I've ever seen. It's a very generous 3/10 from me.
The Warrant DID have some value - lovely, fine horses, authentic tackle, and riders that could ACTUALLY ride, with backwoods Civil War battles between Confed and Yankee footsoldiers. There was just something a bit phony about the setup, for example Hero, John Breaker, lacked that classical taciturn-ness - opting instead for 1970s "whimsical". But I did like, Steve McQueen, (grandson of his namesake) putting in a most solid performance, a face for the Future.
¿Sabías que…?
- ErroresThis movie is set in the 1800's yet "Intel" is used - a term that only came into use in 1961.
- Citas
Cal Breaker: Well, he was your friend.
John Breaker: No he wasn't. Just because you know a man doesn't make him your friend.
- Bandas sonorasBattle Hymn of the Republic
Civil war song
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- How long is The Warrant?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 24 minutos
- Color
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