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The Last Stop in Yuma County (now streaming on Paramount+) is a curious place: a gas station without gas, a motel lacking guests, and a diner without air conditioning—but it does have plenty of pie and an abundance of escalating suspense! This is the setting for Francis Galluppi’s directorial debut, a thriller tightly packed with intrigue. With a budget of a mere million dollars, Galluppi brings to life a story featuring an assortment of quirky characters. Led by Jim Cummings, known for his work in The Beta Test and The Wolf of Snow Hollow, the cast navigates a plot involving various weapons and, naturally, a bag of money. The film’s craftiness earned Galluppi a spot under the wing of Sam Raimi for an upcoming Evil Dead feature, marking a fitting next chapter in his career.
The Gist: âYouâll die for our rhubarb pie.â Ominous sign outside this diner, but it wouldnât be quite so ominous if we didnât have an inkling that some gnarly shit was about to go down there. A gentleman identified only as The Knife Salesman (Cummings) pilots his thirsty yellow POS next to a pump only to learn from the kindly proprietor Vernon (Faizon Love) that heâs got no gas to sell. The next gas station is 100 miles away, he says. The tanker truck is on its way, he says. You can wait in the diner until it gets here, he says. TKS sighs. Then the local sheriff (Michael Abbott Jr.) drops off his wife Charlotte (Jocelin Donahue) to open the restaurant. TKS fiddles with the radio and a news report squawks something something bank robbery something something green Ford Pinto. TKS pulls his keys out of the ignition, grabs his case of gin-yoo-wine Japanese kitchen knives, and parks at a booth.
And then wouldnchaknowit, a green Ford Pinto pulls in. Needs gas. No gas. Deep sigh. Two Real Characters climb out â Beau (Richard Brake), a steely-eyed stick of beef jerky, and Travis (Nicholas Logan), a beefy sweathog in saggy pants. Confirmed: thereâs about $700k in their trunk. They sleaze into the diner and before you know it, their guns are out and Beau is cutting the phone line and wrapping his hands around Charlotteâs neck while TKS concentrates on holding in his pee. Stay chill and nobody will get hurt, they say. Weâll just sit over here while we wait for the gas truck, they say. Charlotte pours them coffee. They donât want any pie. Can you turn on the a/c, Travis says. Canât â busted, Charlotte says. So everybody sits and sweats.
This place being the donât say the title of the movie, itâs inevitably a temporary dead end for anybody with a hollow gas tank within dozens and dozens of miles. And so a bunch of none-the-wisers pile into the diner. Thereâs an older couple, Robert (Gene Jones) and Earline (Robin Bartlett); he naps sitting up and she knits. Vernon comes in for The Usual for breakfast. A young couple, Miles (Robin Masson) and Sybil (Sierra McCormick), roll in on some serious Connie and Blyde vibes. A local named Pete (Jon Proudstar) straddles a stool and orders some biscuits and gravy. Beau plunks a coin in the jukebox and youâd think the music might fill the silence and break the tension but Iâm here to tell you that it only makes it worse. Much to our delight.
What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: Yuma County hits like Hell or High Water if it was directed by the Coen Bros. (think Blood Simple, maybe No Country for Old Men), with a couple of speeches penned by Quentin Tarantino.
Performance Worth Watching: The desperation Cummings slyly summons for this role is both hilarious and off-putting.
Memorable Dialogue: Sybil and Miles dropped the reference after I dubbed them Connie and Blyde, promise:
Sybil: Weâre just like Bonnie and Clyde.
Miles: No, like Kit and Holly.
Sybil: Who the hell is that?
Miles: Badlands, baby.
Sex and Skin: None.
Our Take: Smalltalk chitchat is always excruciating, but never more so than when thereâs a big invisible bubble of situational irony in the room. Some people know. Some people donât. Whatâs the tipping point? Galluppi expertly winds up the tension and peaks at the end of the second act, then puts his characters at the cusp of a what now? third act that pushes the movie to the frayed ends of morality and sanity, the silent brooding of its bleak fatalism pierced by the honk of a horn and a babyâs cry, which make us laugh in spite of ourselves. Which only makes the movie easier to admire â and more fun, of course.
With its emphasis on visual style, colorful characters and dark comedy, Yuma County is a B-movie through and through. Is it âaboutâ anything? I dunno. Wanna talk about how everyone is going to die eventually? Didnât think so. Iâd rather note how ridiculous it is that Vernon eats toast with a fork, how tenebrous Brakeâs performance is, how Cummings looks like a weasel in a mid-century sport jacket, how Charlotte is a character worth clinging to for her understated blue-collar nobility, how inspired Logan is at playing a dopey galoot. Sometimes things in movies play out in an unsettling manner, reflecting the crepuscular realities of life, and all we can do is shake our heads and laugh in the face of folly and futility.
Our Call: Taut, gripping, funny, black-as-spades thrillers like this donât come along too often. STREAM IT.
John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
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