Dust Review

A dying woman relates the exploits of her ancestors to divert the attention of a robber who's trying to find out where she keeps her gold coins.

by Anna Smith |
Published on
Release Date:

03 May 2002

Running Time:

124 minutes

Certificate:

18

Original Title:

Dust

An ambitious attempt at a spiritual Western, Dust jumps between past and present as a dying woman relates the exploits of her ancestors. The tension (in theory) lies in the fact that she's stringing out her tale to keep the attention of a robber who's trying to find out where she keeps her gold coins.

Joseph Fiennes and David Wenham both deliver as the gun-toting brothers involved in the Macedonian revolution, but the film's obsession with the subjectivity of storytelling detracts from our involvement with their fate. Shame, because the strong supporting performances and cinematography do their best to pull us in. As for the contemporary narrative, things become increasingly confused by lofty conceptual ambitions.

Interesting viewing, but nowhere near as entertaining as it should be.
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