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Cavale aux portes de l'enfer

Original title: The Legend of Hell's Gate: An American Conspiracy
  • 2011
  • PG-13
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
4.1/10
840
YOUR RATING
The Legend of Hell's Gate
The story of how 'Hell's Gate' at Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas came to have it's name. Relive the story of how three outlaws expeditions and encounters through historical 1870s Texas were remembered for a lifetime.
Play trailer1:53
1 Video
16 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaHistoryWestern

The story of how 'Hell's Gate' at Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas came to have its name. Relive the story of how three outlaws' expeditions and encounters through historical 1870s Texas were reme... Read allThe story of how 'Hell's Gate' at Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas came to have its name. Relive the story of how three outlaws' expeditions and encounters through historical 1870s Texas were remembered for a lifetime.The story of how 'Hell's Gate' at Possum Kingdom Lake, Texas came to have its name. Relive the story of how three outlaws' expeditions and encounters through historical 1870s Texas were remembered for a lifetime.

  • Director
    • Tanner Beard
  • Writer
    • Tanner Beard
  • Stars
    • Eric Balfour
    • Lou Taylor Pucci
    • Henry Thomas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.1/10
    840
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tanner Beard
    • Writer
      • Tanner Beard
    • Stars
      • Eric Balfour
      • Lou Taylor Pucci
      • Henry Thomas
    • 15User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    No. 1
    Trailer 1:53
    No. 1

    Photos15

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    Top cast74

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    Eric Balfour
    Eric Balfour
    • Will Edwards
    Lou Taylor Pucci
    Lou Taylor Pucci
    • Kid Called Kelly
    Henry Thomas
    Henry Thomas
    • John St. Helens
    Jenna Dewan
    Jenna Dewan
    • Katherine Prescott
    Summer Glau
    Summer Glau
    • Maggie Moon
    Jamie Thomas King
    Jamie Thomas King
    • John Henry 'Doc' Holliday
    Tanner Beard
    Tanner Beard
    • James McKinnon
    Glenn Morshower
    Glenn Morshower
    • J.H. Gordon
    William McNamara
    William McNamara
    • Jones Moon
    • (as Billy McNamara)
    Michael Taber
    Michael Taber
    • Johnny Moon
    Corey Knipe
    • The Russian
    Barry Tubb
    Barry Tubb
    • Sheriff Michaels
    Michael Spears
    Michael Spears
    • Kutseena
    Eddie Spears
    Eddie Spears
    • Wakaree
    Kevin Alejandro
    Kevin Alejandro
    • August Edwards
    James Lafferty
    James Lafferty
    • Eigson Howard
    Robert Buckley
    Robert Buckley
    • Bacas Mitchell
    Stephen Monroe Taylor
    Stephen Monroe Taylor
    • Tower Mitchell
    • (as Steven Taylor)
    • Director
      • Tanner Beard
    • Writer
      • Tanner Beard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    4.1840
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    Featured reviews

    6cosmo_tiger

    A very watchable and entertaining western. Better then most of the recent offerings. Surprisingly good. I say B

    "My name is not St. Helens, my name John Booth the assassin of Abraham Lincoln." Just outside Possum Kingdom Lake in Texas there is a cliff formation that is known as Hell's Gate. During the 1870's this place was home to notorious outlaws and crimes. When a young boy overhears a conversation involving the local bartender he thinks he found a way to get rich. He teams with two strangers in order to make it rich and famous. Being a huge history buff this movie seemed very interesting to me. It says based on a true story, but I'm not sure how accurate this actually is. I have been saying that the western genre has really fallen off in the last ten years. This one is still a definite B western, but it is much much better then most of the recent ones. The acting is iffy at best but the story keeps you watching and I was actually surprised at how much I was enjoying it. Overall, not a bad western at all. Very watchable and pretty entertaining. I give it a B.
    3sgroyle

    Acting let it down

    What could have been a good movie was let down by bad acting,particularly by the Director/Actor. A terrible Irish accent and "hammy" at the best of times. Others weren't much better. I understand that this was a low-budget indie film and applaud the effort, but surely there's more acting talent than this. Apart from the acting, the events leading to the "main plot" do not get there until halfway through the movie and then fade away almost as quickly. What we are really watching is a movie about three bad guys on the run; and that could have worked,but didn't have enough character development to make us care.
    2swimtwobirds

    If at first you don't succeed ...

    Some 15 years ago I wrote a piece 'eBooks: the future of storytelling' in which I speculated on how technological advance changes the way stories are told, indeed, changes the stories themselves. Amongst other then rather fanciful prophecies I foretold a device which would project odour to accompany a movie story. Now I see that this has at last become a reality; at least, this Hell's Gate really does smell - like an overused outhouse on a hot summer's day.

    Any movie is a story; and a story must be coherent; this is not. Satyricon is not; it is a pastiche – but it took a genius like Fellini to get away with it. That Hollywood will spend millions on CG and explosions while at the same time keeping the writers' bill down in the thousands, and that begrudged, is well known. But for the rising indie, the rebel who seeks to displace the big guys, hopefully by artistic skill and quality, to produce a story based on a script jotted on the back of an old envelope is not the way to go. Your job is to tell a coherent story; do it with all of the ornamentation you can add, but never so much that its coherence is lost, or even threatened.

    Scripts comprise actions and dialogue; there was plenty of action in this movie, some of it even meaningful, but of dialogue – well? Were we witnessing a new trend in movie-making, the all-ad-libbed attention addler? Could the 'talent' not remember their lines? Did they know what 'articulation' and 'enunciation' mean? Or could the handi- cams not pick up their voices? Not enough interest to do a few voice loops in post-prod? If Shakespeare had written a grunt for Hamlet to recite instead of 'To be or not to be' and the next 20 lines, the world of theatre would be a poorer place; yet this malodourous malevolence of a movie apparently seeks to promote the grunt as mankind's last word in oral articulation and verbal communication. The grunt, while having the merit of brevity, does lack specificity.

    Another element required of a story is that its audience relates to it – they relate to the characters. Often audiences relate to the guy they see on the screen – the actor – instead of to the character; but that's Hollywood for you, either way those bozos make money. Indies don't have Cruises or Schwarzneggers in their budgets; but they can cast an actor into a suitable part and support that actor into dressing out and projecting the character, and its development, if they have the skill. Mr Beard, why didn't you do that?

    With camera tripods so affordable, and good liquor so dear, how come the decision to use camerapersons apparently afflicted with the shakes and the staggers?

    And what was the dreadfully delivered Oirish accent all about? Thousands of very talented Irish in the world (meself, for example), all with accents, many with acting skills, eager for a chance, and you have to offend an entire nation by putting this gratuitous foulness into your 'script'? Of course, since there is so little else in the script, perhaps the multi-talent-free 'writer', 'director' and (of course) his own 'leading man' felt obliged to put something in – anything! I suppose he called it 'color', or 'character' when he was begging dad-in-law for the backing.

    I think the whole movie was best epitomised by the shoot-out scene in the bar and outside it – 'full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.' While we may be amused at the great waste of gunpowder as against the minimal resulting carnage – how very opposed to Hollywood is this! – we are ultimately not engaged because we have no idea who these people are, or why they are doing this – and so we frankly don't care. Which is the single most telling aspect of this movie that you project, Mr Beard: we don't care, most likely because you didn't.

    Yet it's not a total loss; what merit came through incites me to say that I hope you try again.
    2sauerkraut-96467

    Poor script and acting

    I REALLY hate scripts that are about an area that the writer knows nothing about. The one that jumped right out at me was when they were going to cross the Brazos river in Granbury and they had to swim. I have a news flash, unless it was right after a heavy rain storm which by all the dust I highly doubt, you can probably walk across the Brazos without getting your ankles wet! Also, they rode horseback from Dallas to Granbury in one night, which is also HIGHLY unlikely since as the crow flies it has to be at least 70 miles. From downtown Fort Worth it is at least 45 miles.

    The accents by the actors were so bad, and that goes for the Irish, southern, and the others that were unrecognizable.
    Momo-36

    Good little western for the masses

    I had seen the short and then saw the film at the Newport festival. A good 'indie' western production and the ever glowing Summer Rain is always a favorite! Eric Balfour was interesting to see in this genre. Rest of the cast was good and nice to see some new Indian actors, who can act. All in all a good film considering the budget isn't nearly as much as big studio produced westerns. I would suggest it for those who love westerns, Eric Balfour, Summer Rain and conspiracy theorists. Great to see Henry Thomas - E.T. anyone? I know he's done other films but he had a meaty role finally. Something that was a bit of a stand out role, which he hasn't had a lot of. When and if it is the theaters, I'll suggest my parents to go see it. It's got a wide appeal as the cast is young and now with Cowboys and Aliens, the younger generation will start having an appreciation for westerns again.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Tanner Beard (James McKinnon) was actually born in Snyder, Texas.

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 25, 2016 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Legend of Hell's Gate: An American Conspiracy
    • Filming locations
      • Possum Kingdom, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • 4Go West Productions
      • Flatiron Pictures
      • Silver Sail Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 48 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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