Comfortable and Furious

Tombstone (1993)

Tombstone (1993) was the epic story of Wyatt Earp, his brothers, and the famous Shootout at the O.K. Corral, but it was much, much more. Wyatt, retired from the dangerous and stressful career as a lawman, was to settle in Tombstone with his brothers and their families, to an enterprising venture into the hotel and gaming business.

They were joined by Wyatt’s loyal friend, Doc Holliday (Val Kilmer) and his trollop, and things quickly got interesting. With no Tripadvisor available at that time, Wyatt and Co. apparently did not do their homework if they were looking for peace or a law-abiding atmosphere in Tombstone. Unfortunately, Tombstone was totally controlled by the notorious and murderous Cowboy gang, a red-scarf wearing gang of goons led by Curly Bill Brocious (Powers Booth), and his right hand henchman, a gunslinger named Ringo (Michael Biehn).

A confrontation was inevitable, but word-bantering and mutual respect only went so far as things escalated when Curly, while in an opium and alcohol-fueled tirade, accidentally shot and killed the figurehead sheriff of Tombstone. Wyatt Earp was forced to intervene. The Earp Brothers, minus a reluctant Wyatt, assumed the law-enforcement duties of Tombstone,and this culminated in the famous Shootout At the O.K. Corral This, however, was only the beginning of the story.

The Earp brothers were subsequently decimated when Virgil was crippled and Morgan was murdered with a cowardly shot in the back. An unarmed and disgraced Wyatt supposedly slunk out of town, but underestimating a steaming Wyatt Earp and a supposedly near-dead Doc Holliday amounted to signing your own death warrant. Wyatt Earp went totally Berserko Rambo, and Doc arose from his death bed to methodically take out the Cowboy Gang, and to restore order in the Tombstone area.

One cannot even begin to discuss Tombstone without mentioning the cast. We had, Kurt Russell, Sam Elliott and Bill Paxton as the Earp Brothers, Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday, bad guys Billy Bob Thornton, Powers Boothe and Michael Biehn, just for starters. How about Charlton Heston as Henry Hooker and Robert Mitchum as a narrator? We also had Michael Rooker, Billy Zane, Stephen Lang, Harry Carey Jr., Frank Stallone and a guy whose real name was actually Wyatt Earp! There were 83 speaking parts in this movie. The women? What women? (see below)

Tombstone was not merely a delicious Western, as it was the perfect storm of acting, pacing and dialogue. The epic showdowns in Tombstone were not just those that ended in gunfire, but more likely fought by the battle of wits and the vituperative tongue of one Doc Holliday. Kurt Russell, Sam Elliot and Bill Paxton pulled off magnificent performances, but Val Kilmer’s portrayal of Doc Holliday was nothing short of a tour-de-force.

Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday was a pale, pasty, feverish, sweaty and almost always drunken pisser. He was an enigma who had a deceptive, charming and amiable presence. In reality, he was about as innocuous as a pissed-off cobra with AIDS. His tongue was a convincing as his six-shooters and those who miscalculated his deadliness paid dearly. I cannot say enough about the performance of Val Kilmer in Tombstone. He steals every scene and is an expert at dancing with death. Stealing the show from this outstanding cast was quite a feat, but Val Kilmer did it with such enjoyable and seamless ease.

Much has been written about the parallel blockbuster film that was released about the same time, but Tombstone, while not being as extravagant as Warner Bro’s Wyatt Earp, was clearly the superior film, at about 1/3 the cost. The sensational script of Kevin Jarre, coupled with the above mentioned acting and dialogue is why. Tombstone is just one of the best Westerns ever made.

Homoeroticism:

More than you can possibly imagine. I don’t even know where to begin, but it doesn’t matter. While definitely not an 80’s Action movie, this movie was all about the guys, in spite of the presence of many hot women. I mean, the film was simply oozing with man’s lust for man. Do totally straight men utter lines like these?

  • “He’s the Prettiest man I ever saw” – Curly Bill (talking about Mr. Fabian)
  • “I already drilled him in the ass” -Ringo
  • “I’m your huckleberry” -Doc Holliday
  • “You’re no daisy. You’re no daisy at all!” -Doc Holliday
  • “So run, you cur… RUN! Tell all the other curs the law’s comin’! You tell them I’m comin’ ” -Wyatt Earp
  • “A man like Ringo has a great big hole, right in the middle of him.” -Doc Holliday
  • “You know Ed, if I thought you weren’t my friend… I just don’t think I could bear it! ” -Doc Holliday
  • “Live Wyatt. Live for me. Wyatt, if you were ever my friend – if ya ever had even the slightest of feelin’ for me, leave now. Leave now… Please.” -Doc Holliday
  • “My dear, you’ve set your gaze upon the quintessential frontier type. Note the lean silhouette… eyes closed by the sun, though sharp as a hawk. He’s got the look of both predator and prey.” -Mr. Fabian (Yes, he is pretty, and lusting after Wyatt Earp)

Doc Holliday played on both sides of the fence, or at least he talked like he wanted to…all the time. His affection for Wyatt Earp was obviously beyond friendship, and when he winked and made “kissie” faces at Billy Clanton (Thomas Haden Church), I thought that the GayDar was going to break. Wyatt Earp became so jealous that he immediately opened fire, and that is the real story of the shoot-out at the O.K. Corral.

Quotes and one liners (too many to even try to list):

  • “I’m your Huckleberry” -Doc Holiday
  • “I don’t think I’m going to allow you to arrest us today, Behan.” -Wyatt Earp
  • “Maybe poker’s just not your game, Ike. I know: let’s have a spelling contest.” -Doc Holiday
  • “I want your blood, I want your souls. I want them right now!” -Ringo
  • “Are you going to do something, or just stand there and bleed?” -Wyatt Earp
  • “Why Johnny Ringo, you look like someone just walked over your grave.” -Doc Holliday
  • “Nonsense! I have not yet begun to defile myself.” -Doc Holiday
  • “My hypocrisy goes only so far.” -Doc Holiday
  • “That’s not what he said, you ignorant wretch. Your Spanish is worse than your English.” -Ringo
  • “Remember what I said about people seein’ a bright light before they die? It ain’t true. I can’t see a damn thing.” -Morgan Earp
  • “You die first, get it? Your friends might get me in a rush, but not before I make your head into a canoe, you understand me?” -Wyatt Earp
  • “Oh, make no mistake. It’s not revenge he’s after. It’s a reckoning.” -Doc Holiday
  • “Christ Almighty, it’s like I’m sittin’ here playin’ cards with my brother’s kids or somethin’. You nerve-wrackin’ sons-a-bitches.” -Johnny Tyler
  • “How we feelin today, Doc?” -Wyatt Earp “I’m dyin’, how are you?” -Doc Holiday “Pretty much the same” -Wyatt Earp

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4 responses to “Tombstone (1993)”

  1. Evil Jack Slade. Avatar

    Tombstone is the best of all the Wyatt Earp mythologies, by far. The real story of the Earp Brothers, the Cowboys and the 30 shots in 30 seconds (Val Kilmer alone fired that many from his two six guns at the OK Corral ) would take an epic miniseries on the order of Game of Thrones to do the story justice.
    Minor point: The Cowboys wore a red sash, like Wild Bill Hickok and cowboy artist Charles Russell. Wild Bill used the sash to holster his brace of Navy Colt’s revolvers.

    1. Goat Avatar
      Goat

      Thanks for the input, I appreciate it.

  2. Hoggoth The Hoary Avatar
    Hoggoth The Hoary

    I firmly believe that Val Kilmer unleashed a lifetime’s worth of acting talent for this one single movie. He pulled off one final decent performance afterwards in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, but he mailed in every other role since 1993..

    1. Goat Avatar
      Goat

      I just watched Top Gun: Maverick, where he played a bit part of the dying Iceman. This sequel was excellent, a real surprise. Cruise is ageless.

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