Just came back from ... No significant spoilers ...

I can see why this movie is inaccessible. The central character is not a person. It's a place, a small town called Horizon.

Someone (we don't know who) is printing up flyers promoting a utopia Western town called Horizon. Why? We don't know.

This film, "Chapter I," is a series of tales related to Horizon. Some happen in Horizon. Some don't. But all these tales eventually link to Horizon. (1/x)

Characters live. Characters die. Characters seem to serve no purpose and disappear off-screen. Will they return in future chapters? Who knows.

The characters' purpose is not to service the plot. It's to service Horizon.

Costner's character is just one subplot. Woody Harrelson all but disappears into his role, a Union Army sergeant.

eventually becomes a Max mini-series, which explains the odd structure. But it also explains why theatre audiences don't connect to it. (2/2)

Follow

This is the only picture I can find online for the flyer. Maybe someone can find a more complete image.

Doing research for my Florida space politics book, I found something similar, a 1925 two-page ad promoting land in Cape Canaveral. It promised a lot that wasn't true either.

Sign in to participate in the conversation

CounterSocial is the first Social Network Platform to take a zero-tolerance stance to hostile nations, bot accounts and trolls who are weaponizing OUR social media platforms and freedoms to engage in influence operations against us. And we're here to counter it.