ON THE SET

Ed Harris ramrods unconventional western 'Appaloosa'

The actor dons his directing and writing hats as well for an Old West tale concocted by Robert B. Parker.
By John Horn, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 7, 2008
GALISTEO, N.M. -- AUTHENTIC westerns feature authentic dirt -- muddy chaps, weather-beaten storefronts and hair that's far from blow-dry clean. But the dust storms that occasionally raged during the making of “Appaloosa” took actor-director Ed Harris’ old-fashioned gunslinger story from the realm of the genuine into the domain of the wind tunnel.

On a cool afternoon last October, Harris' filmmaking team was battling the dermabrasion elements as the director raced a quickly setting sun. Electricians hid behind goggles. Carpenters covered their mouths with surgical masks. A handful of the crew donned welders' visors. And pretty much everyone would spend a long time in the shower that night, trying to wash the fine grit out.

In addition to directing and co-writing the movie, Harris was playing Virgil Cole, who with partner Everett Hitch (Viggo Mortensen) has taken charge of the frontier town of Appaloosa in an unspecified Southwestern state to defend it from the ruthless rancher Randall Bragg ( Jeremy Irons) and his malevolent gang. Toward the film's end, the habitually law-abiding Hitch decides he must use some extrajudicial tactics to square up accounts and prepares for a gunfight in front of the town's hotel.