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He ultimately managed to raise a modest budget of about $20 million for the production, which was largely shot in New Mexico. Harris had to fight to keep in sequences aboard an old steam train that are pivotal to the action, along with a shootout that was filmed in Texas. "I said, `If you start taking away these elements, the production value of this thing is not going to be what it's supposed to be. It's not going to have the visual impact it needs. It's part of the story,'" Harris said. "Anyway, we finally got it set up and going. It wasn't a luxurious shoot by any means, but we did have the means to do it." Harris approaches filmmaking with workmanlike facility, his co-stars said. "He's generally pretty efficient," Mortensen said. "He had to be because of the budget and wanting to put so much of it on the screen in terms of the production values." "He's not a man of many words, you know. He shows up and says what he's hoping for, sets it up and puts it to film," Zellweger said. "Everything was just so comfortable and easy. Maybe that says more than any anecdote I might come up with. He's confident and he's pretty clear about he wants, and it just kind of falls into place." Harris did some musicals in his college acting days and has played guitar and piano, the latter for his 2006 turn as the composer in "Copying Beethoven."
But the song he sings over the closing credits, "You'll Never Leave My Heart," came about as a bit of a fluke, Harris writing the lyrics and Jeff Beal, who did the movie's musical score, coming up with the tune. "I was up late one night just fooling around, you know. I showed it to him, he goes, `Let me try to write some music for it,'" Harris said. "Anyway, it was fun. We had a good time recording it." Harris' song is an earthy, angry romantic reproach sounding like something a lonely cowboy could have concocted around a campfire back in Old West times. Preceding it over the end credits is a modern country-rock tune from Tom Petty and his band Mudcrutch, "Scare Easy." Harris initially resisted the Petty song, finding the tone too contemporary for his 19th century tale. "The first time I listened to it, I went, `No, this is not right,'" Harris said. "But then I kept listening to it and we tried it over the credits, and it was like, `Yeah, man, the film's over. ... Let's rock.'"
[Associated
Press;
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