Written and directed by David Jacobson, "Down in the Valley" is about a self-styled cowpoke (Edward Norton) who while pumping gas in the San Fernando Valley becomes smitten with a naive underage girl (Evan Rachel Wood). Complications naturally ensue, largely in the form of the girl's aggravated father and the man's slipping grasp on reality. Jacobson, whose previous work includes the serial-killer drama "Dahmer," is bursting with nifty ideas stemming from the central conceit of an Old West cowboy let loose in a modern landscape, few of which are brought to any kind of satisfactory fruition. The filmmaker obviously intends his work as a sweeping statement regarding contemporary masculinity and the malleability of current values, while also tossing in a few other notions that can be thematically tied to the western.
