One of YouTube channel Honest Trailers’ jokes about the movie Tombstone is that it answers the questions “what if you only made a movie out of the good parts.” Only modestly successful at the box office, this new telling of Wyatt Earp and his adventures around Tombstone became a staple of Cable television and is now regarded as one of the most awesome (and manly) movies ever made. This was a real treat on my watchlist, as it somehow is generally accurate while still retaining the feel of an entertaining blockbuster. It’s got an unbelievably full and incredible cast, and it’s a testament to both the actors and the screenplay that nearly all of them leave their mark.
What’s interesting about Tombstone was that it was a sincere
update of the classic Western outline. Our protagonist or protagonists show up
in a town riddled by chaos. Though reluctant, they ultimately have to use
violence to clean up the place. Indeed, this might be the last high-profile
Western to not be a deconstructive film. If you ask me, the idea of the
deconstructionist Western has been well overplayed by now. Film reporters and
critics are always gushing about films for challenging the classic American
myth of the West, but these days it’s hardly a brave and bold stance within
Hollywood. But that’s not what this review is about, so I’ll get back on topic.
Before going further, I should note that there are two major sources of the inaccuracies in Tombstone. One is that the timeline is simplified and condensed. The time of the Earps’ arrival in Tombstone to the Vendetta Ride was between two and three years. The movie makes it feel much shorter. Also, the characters were up to a lot more, often changing jobs and in the case of love interest Josephine actually leaving the town for a while before coming back. One switcheroo in time is that Doc Holliday seems to die shortly after the Vendetta Ride and then Wyatt links back up with his romantic interest. Actually, Holliday lingered on until 1887, about five years after the movie ends.