The Last Ride [Blu-ray-

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Product Description Inspired by the mysterious final days of Hank Williams' mercurial life, THE LAST RIDE is the story of that fateful road trip at the end of 1952. Amazon.com The sorry demise of country music legend Hank Williams is depicted in The Last Ride, a 2011 drama directed by Harry Thomason. This is not your typical music biopic; whereas, say, Walk the Line and Coal Miner's Daughter limn the lives and careers of their central characters (Johnny Cash and Loretta Lynn, respectively), this film takes place over the course of less than three days, focusing on the relationship between Williams (ably portrayed by Henry Thomas, now in his 40s and three decades removed from E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial) and the bewildered young man (Jesse James, playing a character called Silas) hired to drive the singer from Alabama to a couple of gigs in West Virginia and Ohio at the tail end of 1952. By this time, Williams, just 29 years old, was a dying man, a raging alcoholic and druggie who also suffered from debilitating back pain, all of which made him notoriously unreliable. Add to that some nasty winter weather and a few unplanned escapades along the way (a brush with the police, a bar fight), and it's obvious early on that they'll never make the West Virginia show; they don't make it to Ohio, either, as Williams dies in the back seat of his fancy Cadillac en route. Central to the tale are the life lessons delivered by the veteran star, who's alternately cantankerous and charming, to his callow young driver, and those scenes are well played. On the down side, we hear nary a note of the real Hank Williams's music, as his songs (including classics like "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry," "Hey, Good Lookin'," and "Cold, Cold Heart") are all performed by others, including Hank's daughter, Jett Williams; Thomas's Williams never so much as picks up a guitar. What's more, viewers are obliged to buy into the film's principal conceit: not once do we hear the name "Hank Williams" (he's referred to as "Mr. Wells" or "Luke"), and of all the characters we meet along the way, only one seems to recognize him. Even Silas has no idea who his passenger is, which is one of several instances where the script diverges from the facts; the real-life driver, Charles Carr, had known the singer for most of his life (Carr died in July 2013). A minor quibble? Sure--especially in view of the f