Son of a Gun (2019) Poster

(2019)

User Reviews

Review this title
6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Solid Independent Film
macdonag4 April 2019
The filmmaker Travis Mills gets better with each movie he makes. This one is his most polished to date. The cinematography is great, as well as the sound, and music. It all comes together as a rich story telling experience.

The story unfolds and builds throughout with good pace, allowing the viewer to wonder and contemplate what is right and wrong, myth and truth. With some above average acting from experienced actors and newcomers alike, this movie is worth watching.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Great story and well told.
ato13752829 March 2019
Great telling of an old myth. Quite a twist at the end. Wonderful authentic locations.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Very Entertaining Movie by Travis Mills
larryjudkins26 June 2019
This was the first movie I watched by Travis Mills. Thought it was a terrific story about a pregnancy during the civil war. Somewhat a spiritual kind in the sense. Loved the actors, Miles Doleac and Cotton Yancey did an excellent performance in their perspective roles. A shout out to Travis Mills to continue making good quality films as good as this one.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Amateur Effort Sours an Otherwise Promising Film
makleen210 June 2019
A Confederate surgeon invents a battlefield legend to protect a young woman from an intolerant society in Son of a Gun (2019), written and directed by Travis Mills. This indie production reels in its audience with an interesting premise but from the first scene to the last, falls short in nearly every category of filmmaking.

The year is 1863. Union and Confederate armies are locked in deadly combat near Vicksburg, Mississippi. Battlefield surgeon Legrand Capers (Miles Doleac) is pulled away from a wounded soldier to tend to a young woman (Jessica Harthcock) at a nearby farmhouse who was shot in the abdomen by a stray bullet. Months later, he returns to learn the woman is pregnant, yet she insists she's a virgin. The stray bullet, passing through the soldier's scrotum, must have somehow impregnated the woman! At least, that's what an elderly Legrand Capers (Cotton Yancey) tells a group of old-timers at a tavern.

Things get complicated when the film unravels three separate versions of events, with different actors and actresses playing the various roles. Each version leads the audience further away from fantasy and toward the scandalous truth. Finally, as Capers is dying of tuberculosis many years after the war, he is confronted by the family's former slave, Mamie (Nancy Lindsey), who knows what really happened.

Son of a Gun's use of multiple perspectives and multiple casts to tell the story was unique and not as confusing as it sounds. The actor who played middle-aged Capers, William Shannon Williams, was subtly charming and fit the roll well, as did actress Nancy Lindsey. For the most part, the performances were fine. It was the amateurish sound and editing that cheapened every scene.

Son of a Gun is based on a Civil War-era medical legend about a bullet that carries away a soldier's testicle and impregnates a woman living nearby. Mississippi physician Legrand G. Capers, Jr. originally submitted the tall tale to The American Medical Weekly as a joke. It was published in their November 7, 1874 issue. Snopes recounts how the story spread and eventually lost its farcical origins.

This film invents an explanation for why Dr. Capers would circulate such a story. He was, according to writer/director Travis Mills, protecting a young woman from scandal who became pregnant out of wedlock. I enjoyed watching as each story unraveled to uncover just a little bit more of the "truth". Unfortunately, the film's technical flaws overwhelmed any redeeming quality.

I hate to criticize an amateur filmmaker because we all have to start somewhere, but Travis Mills has dozens of short films under his belt. Son of a Gun looks like all the first takes from a better movie. The sound quality is awful. In more capable hands, this film could've been a quirky dramedy in the vein of O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000). Instead, we're left with an unpolished rough cut in desperate need of audio and video editing.

Son of a Gun has high ratings on Amazon and Imdb, but for the life of me, I can't figure out why. Did we watch the same movie? This film had a more entertaining story than another recent indie Civil War movie, Finding Josephine, but at least that film got the basics right. I've seen amateur YouTube channels with higher production value. Send this one back to the editing room and try again.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great films are created in Mississippi!
charliecda4 April 2019
Travis Mills did a fantastic job! The cinematography is amazing! Travis took an old Mississippi legend and painted a captivating story on the big screen. Using local actors and filming at true to the story locations made for an awesome experience.

I highly recommend watching this film.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A very believable tale.
As in real life when a tale is told over and over the truth and the lies begin to blur. When the truth exposes a lie then more lies, new lies must be told to save face. Travis Mills tells this tale over and over revealing a little more truth each time along with the explanation for the lies previously told, until ultimately the whole truth is revealed. I was captivated throughout. The whole cast performed believable roles but Cotton Yancey deserves a special mention for excelling in his role as the Doctor. A quality indie production. There are one or two minor sound issues but they in no way detracted from a thoroughly enjoyable film.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed