EL ARDOR – A Film Review
When you need a savior…
We never learned where Shane came from, or where he
went to when his job was done; Clint Eastwood’s characters in HIGH PLAINS
DRIFTER and PALE RIDER took the mystery to a nearly mystical level. In writer/director Pablo Fendrik’s
Argentinean Western, EL ARDOR, the hero seems to appear in response to
primitive rituals made to river spirits by desperate jungle farmers.
Set in the rain forest of Misiones, the
finger-shaped northern Argentinean province between Paraguay and Brazil, it is
much like our wild west in the worst ways – the battle for vast tracts of
jungle land has brought about horrifying violence. Joao (Chico Diaz) is a poor tobacco farmer
who has seen neighboring farmers forced to sell their land; seen them burned
out; seen them murdered. He senses the smoke is moving in his
direction, and he, his one farm hand, and daughter Vania (Alice Braga), are no
match for the three heartless hired guns who descend upon them with a bill of
sale they want executed. Kai (Gael
Garcia Bernard), the man from the river, cannot stop the slaughter of the
farmer and his hand, but when the gunmen take the daughter, Kai is quickly on
the jungle trail, meant to seem as much a spirit as the gorgeous but deadly
leopard who seems forever on the edge of camp.
The hired guns
Cinematographer Julian Apezteguia captures the
beauty and menace of the jungle in a film which rarely travels indoors. At times too deliberate in its pacing, it is
a story of isolated, frontier lives, and it is a bare bones story in many
ways. There are only eight characters in
the tale. Most of them go through jungle
and swamp in bare feet: only the three mercenaries – Jorge Sesan, Julian Tello,
and Lautaro Vilo – have boots. We think of cowboy characters as laconic, but
these people redefine the term. Most is
said visually, in expression and gesture: there are perhaps three expository
scenes with considerable conversation. The
minimalist approach does not always work to the film’s benefit; with so few
turns in the story, there is continuity, but few surprises. Then again, there is a hauntingly eerie,
smoke-filled finale shootout.
Surprisingly, there is no Macguffin. The real case that inspired Fendrik involved
killing farmers and stealing land to grow soy.
Here it could soy, or oil, or wood – we never know, and never know who
the hired guns work for. An interesting and
humanizing detail is that the gunmen are brothers, the two older ones trying to
bring the youngest into the family business.
All of the performances are naturalistic and utterly
believable. The unselfconsciously beautiful
Alice Braga is the only woman in the cast, strong without being a superwoman, and
her character, with so much on her plate, is unaware of the desire she stirs
about her. Gael Garcia Bernard also is not superhuman – he
plays his character as the right man in the right place at the right time,
despite others seeing him as something more. The mystical/supernatural element introduced
at the beginning, dissipates. The score
by Sebastian Escofet is used sparingly but effectively; sometimes driving,
sometimes almost symphonic, sometimes just throbbing bass-notes. Released on Friday, July 17th, by Participant Media, it can be found in
theatres, and is available on demand.
FIRST LOOK AT 'THE REVENANT'!
Here's the first trailer for Leo DeCaprio's 'mountain man' movie, set to open on Christmas Day!
A SHORT BUT 'MAGNIFICENT' CHAT WITH WALTER MIRISCH
Deadline: Hollywood's Peter Hammond, KCET's Mary Mazur,
Walter Mirisch, James Coburn Jr., KCET's Michael Riley
On Tuesday night, July 14th, at the Aero
Theatre in Santa Monica, legendary producer Walter Mirisch was honored with the
KCET
Cinema Series Lumière Award at a screening of one of his finest
films, THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960).
Mirisch, who would go on to produce WEST SIDE STORY (1961), THE GREAT
ESCAPE (1963), and a plethora of film collaborations with Billy Wilder and
Blake Edwards, and win the Best Picture Oscar for IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (1967),
started out producing at Monogram in the late 1940s, producing a series of
jungle adventures called BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY.
The productions were a cut above the studio’s usual product, and things
improved vastly when Mirisch made a deal to produce a series of Westerns
starring Joel McCrea.
On
the red carpet on Tuesday night, I had a chance to ask Mr. Mirisch about these
early, excellent efforts.
HENRY: Which
of the films that you did with Joel McCrea were your favorites?
WALTER MIRISCH:
I guess WICHITA (1955) and THE FIRST TEXAN (1956). I think those were the best of them. I think I actually made six with him. I loved Joel McCrea. Wonderful man.
HENRY: How different was it to make those films at Monogram and Allied Artists, with going on to make something as magnificent as
what we’re going to watch tonight?
WALTER MIRISCH:
I don’t know. You cut the cloth
to fit the pattern. You do the best you
can with what you’ve got to do it with. I’m
very proud of those pictures; I wouldn’t deny them for a moment.
HENRY: They’re
delightful. I’m also a huge fan of the
BOMBA, THE JUNGLE BOY films.
WALTER MIRISCH:
(laughs) My God, you go back a long way!
I was about 22 when I made those pictures!
At that point Mr. Mirisch was introduced, for the
first time, to James Coburn Jr., son of one of the stars of both MAGNIFICENT
SEVEN and THE GREAT ESCAPE. I’ll have
more about this event, and what Mr. Mirisch had to say about making MAGNIFICENT
SEVEN, soon in the Round-up!
Incidentally, WICHITA, THE FIRST TEXAN, and another Mirisch/McCrea
collaboration, THE OKLAHOMAN (1957), are all available as MOD (made on demand)
DVDs exclusively from The Warner Brothers
Archive Collection. Go HERE for
details.
ED ERDELAC ON ‘WRITER’S BLOCK’ THURSDAY
Filling in for Bobbi Jean Bell, dog trainer Russ Avion will join host Jim Christina at 8 pm on this Thursday's Writer's Block, interviewing the very talented 'Weird West' author Ed Erdelac. You can
listen live (at ‘Listen Live 2’) HERE, And listen to this or any previous programs on
podcast HERE .
AND THAT’S A WRAP!
Have a great week!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright July 2015 by Henry
C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
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