Texas Rangers Reviews
Filme fraco, o roteiro é fraco, o filme tem cenas de fracas de faroeste, e a história é fraca, o elenco é bom, mas parece que todo o elenco não combinou com o gênero do filme, os personagens sao fracos, e ninguém ajudou a melhorar o filme, e faltou muitas cenas para o filme ser bom.
Take note, they spent 38 million USD making this movie, and it didn't even get to 800K at the box office. Released in theatres 2001, when Ashton Kutcher was a hype, and finally for streaming in 2016. Texas Rangers is one of those list fillers in the main stream channels' western collection, to see if it can make another few bucks, but really only to continue insulting the genre and those who would know what to do with such a budget.
Dylan McDermott destroys a base and simplistic plot in epic fashion. His acting is on par with Johnny Knoxville.
It may be nothing new but I really liked Dylan McDermott's performance and had fun with it.
Story about the adventures of the Texas rangers, who capture outlaws in this fast paced but cheesy western yarn.
Is it the best western ever made? Not a chance. However, there's enough gun-slingin' and shootin' to entertain you for a little while. Doc Ock isn't too bad in the film, either. And James Van Der Beek was a little better in the short film Power/Rangers.
Although the critics gave this movie a bad review, I found it to be a good western. Very good cast. Worth watching.
other than ashton kutcher a pretty damn good flick. even though his name was removed John Milius' dialog is quite strong here and is a big plus to the lightweight plot.
One Sunday morning when there was no football on, this movie came on the local Fox affiliate so I thought I'd give it a viewing. Van Der Beek, Kutcher, McDermott, and Usher did make me want to call this movie "Dawson (Dude,) Where's My Horse." But honestly there were some charming aspects. Surprisingly it wasn't complete dreck. I definitely didn't deserve any rewards and I can't say I recommend it or not per say, but it passed the time when there was nothing else to watch and I wanted to turn my brain off for a couple hours.
A classic western revenge tale. The camera work is horrid, though, I thought I was watching a 1990s movie.
John Milius was at one point attached to this film and I'm sure it would have been a much better film had he been allowed to make it. Instead, you get a highly derivative western directed by the man who brought us "My Father the Hero" and "Soul Man". The actors playing the veteran rangers, Dylan McDermott, Randy Travis, Robert Patrick and Tom Skerritt are good, but the young recruits, James Van Der Beek, Ashton Kutcher and Usher (never mind that the not so progressive Texas Ranger didn't hire the first black ranger until 1988) are much less impressive and seem like the "Young Guns" B-team. There are nuggets of what could have been a good film scattered throughout, but the end result feels like the teen version of what could have been a tough gritty western.