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Kevin Costner explains why he self-funded Western epic 'Horizon'

Rodney Ho, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Entertainment News

ATLANTA — When Kevin Costner believes in a project that nobody else does, he has funded it himself. Sometimes, he’s hit it out of the park as in 1990′s Oscar winning film “Dances with Wolves.” Sometimes, he whiffs as in 1997′s often mocked “The Postman.”

Now Costner’s back in the Western genre again with a grandly ambitious epic dubbed “Horizon: An American Saga,” coming to theaters June 28. It’s a potential four-part film series with Warner Bros. releasing the second film Aug. 16. Costner began shooting the third film earlier this month.

“It’s a powerful story,” said Costner, who funded, produced and directed “Horizon,” in a recent interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution at the Four Seasons in midtown Atlanta. He co-wrote the screenplay with Jon Baird. “It’s one I made to make people almost close their eyes in the dark and open them and go for a ride. I wish someone had made this movie for me.”

The saga covers the 1850s and 1860s in Wyoming, where promoters are encouraging people to move to a new town called Horizon primarily using flyers. Shot in Utah, the film features a raft of name actors including Sienna Miller, Sam Worthington and Luke Wilson.

“Horizon” is not based on a book. It’s an idea Costner had in the late 1980s that he was never able to convince any studio to create. So he decided to invest his own money into the project. Hollywood trade publications estimate the first film cost Costner $50 million out of his own pocket.

“It took so long because people don’t buy into something,” Costner said. He is used to being second guessed, noting the skeptics before the release of eventual classic films like “Bull Durham” and “Field of Dreams,” his signature baseball movies.

 

The result is a sprawling film with multiple storylines, centered around Americans seeking to expand their territory and create better lives for themselves. “Cities don’t pop up like mushrooms after a storm,” he said. “Cities were often fought over and contested.”

The film also shows how the existing Native Americans grapple with this influx of gun-toting outsiders invading their land.

“Indigenous people lived lightly on the land,” Costner said. “The Americans who came in bent the land to their will. Who’s to say which is better? I’m no authority.”

The newcomers in the film show a blend of hope, heroism and violent opportunism in a land where rules were made up as they went along.

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