Rango đź’Ż

This is the film’s secret weapon: its existential dread. For a children’s movie, Rango deals heavily with the terror of the unreliable self . In a famous, surreal scene, Rango meets the Spirit of the West—a Clint Eastwood-esque phantom driving a golf cart. When Rango asks for a solution, the spirit tells him, “No man can walk out of his own story.” It is a beautiful, terrifying reminder that you cannot run from who you are; you can only control the story you tell about it.

More importantly, Rango is a meditation on water rights, political corruption, and the manipulation of fear—themes that feel depressingly relevant. The Mayor doesn’t want to kill Rango because he’s evil; he wants to control the water supply to build a Las Vegas-style monument to greed. It’s a critique of unchecked capitalism wrapped in a lizard western. This is the film’s secret weapon: its existential dread

He has everything he needs (water, food, a fake palm tree) but lacks one crucial element: . When Rango asks for a solution, the spirit