Photograph © 1978 Langdon Clay
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Traditional Westerns work on many different levels. They embody an American national myth, a sense of the values and circumstances that forged the nation. They chart an ideal of the national character. They are pageants of pictorial and plastic beauty.
On a deeper level they are wisdom tales about manhood, and sometimes about womanhood — educations in the passage to adulthood.
John Ford’s My Darling Clementine is problematic in many respects, despite offering some of the greatest passages in any Western, indeed in any film. Its secondary narrative, involving Doc Holliday and his girlfriend Chihuahua, doesn’t seem of a piece with the rest of the film — Victor Mature, though he gives one of his best performances ever, and Linda Darnell, vexing as always, seem like visitors from another movie, another genre, another era.
Their story feels perfunctory, artificial — miles away from the deeper currents of the film, which show a wanderer, Wyatt Earp, seduced into the concerns of civilization, gallantry and love. Most importantly they present the image of an authentic manhood coming into being.
Henry Fonda’s Earp synthesizes a number of contradictory traits. He is boyish, instinctively reticent, even shy, but utterly fearless and thoroughly competent when called on to confront danger. He is unfailingly courteous towards others unless they cross the line of the unacceptable, in which case he is matter-of-factly punitive.
He is gallant towards women, even when he’s not sure what form gallantry towards women should take, even when he fears that in showing gallantry he might make a fool of himself. He’s coolly efficient when violent action is required, befuddled when dealing with etiquette towards women — but equally courageous in both predicaments.
His style of being a man defines the essence of manhood — a virility without bluster or show, a politesse without artifice or vanity. His practical resourcefulness and bravery establish his manliness without need of further proof — his humility and generosity lend his manhood a natural nobility.
There are no men like Fonda’s Earp in modern popular art, one sign of the degradation of our culture.
Why is Hollywood so eager to turn comic-book premises into grinding exertions? Is it too much to ask that a movie about giant monsters be in touch with its own ridiculousness?
Check out the excellent and amusing review in full at Uncouth Reflections:
Eda Zahl was the first woman who ever appeared in a photograph on the cover of The National Geographic Magazine. She was the mother of my best friend Paul Zahl when I was a teenager in Washington, D. C. She was an eccentric, brilliant and opinionated woman.
She was the first adult person, apart from my parents, who ever took me seriously, who took my ambitions seriously. My parents would have taken any of my ambitions seriously, but Eda Zahl took my specific ambitions, to become a filmmaker, seriously. She made me feel that abandoning those ambitions would be disgraceful.
Becoming a filmmaker entailed many years of failure, of poverty, of hopelessness. I was sustained in the journey by my parents’ blind faith, but equally by Eda Zahl’s clear-eyed and demanding faith. She taught me that being true to one’s dreams was not just a private, personal indulgence but a duty.
[Note: This analysis of the extended director’s cut of The Exorcist contains spoilers. If you haven’t seen the film you ought to do so immediately, but you should watch the original theatrical cut first, for reasons I outline below.]
In 2000, William Friedkin (pictured below in that year with screenwriter William Peter Blatty) created an extended director’s cut of his 1973 film which restored several scenes eliminated from the original theatrical release, adding about twelve minutes to the running time of the film. All of the restorations, for various reasons, are unfortunate and seriously undermine the film’s power.
One of the greatest virtues of the original cut of The Exorcist was its pacing, moving by inexorable but largely subliminal degrees from ordinary anxieties and misfortunes into the realm of the supernatural. Friedkin’s calculation of this progress was impeccable in the original cut and tremendously effective.
In the original we sense — without being obviously alerted to — the tensions of the McNeil household, the psychological disturbance at work in young Regan as she tries to deal with her parents’ divorce. The depth of that disturbance doesn’t become alarming until Regan urinates on the carpet during the course of one of her mother’s parties.
It’s one of the most harrowing moments in the film because it combines the social distress of Regan’s mom and her guests with a graphic representation of the child’s emotional instability. It is followed by the first potentially supernatural event of the film — the violent and uncanny shaking of Regan’s bed.
Friedkin, however, in his extended cut, has chosen to restore an earlier scene (above) of Regan being examined in a hospital, which reveals her developing neurosis more clearly and warns us how serious it might be or might become. This scene totally undercuts the urination episode, prepares us for it and lessens the shock of it.
At the same time the restored scene doesn’t tell us anything we haven’t already sensed about Regan’s state of mind, and as usual in a drama, especially in a horror film, what we sense tends to be far more powerful than what we are told.
Friedkin also restored a brief scene that was meant to follow the news of Burke Denning’s death. The moment Chris McNeil learns of this, Regan appears crawling upside down and backwards down the stairs, like a spider.
Friedkin originally cut the scene because the wires used to create the effect were visible on the stunt double who performed it, and this was in the days before such wires could be eliminated digitally.
It’s a potent and creepy image but it’s out of place at that moment in the film. In the first place, as Friedkin and Blatty once admitted in a filmed interview, it gives the scene a double climax, lessening the impact of the news of Denning’s demise.
More importantly it shifts our attention from the mystery of Denning’s death, a possible murder committed by Regan, to a graphic and undeniable demonstration of Regan’s demonic power. The murder mystery element, which soon involves the police investigator Lieutenant Kinderman, is a kind of diversion from the supernatural angle, and intriguing on its own. It seems like a too obvious red herring, however — pretty much irrelevant — in the wake of Regan’s spider crawl.
Friedkin restored a scene (above) in which Father Karras listens to a tape Regan made for her father before she became possessed. It gives Karras an appreciation of the normal child Regan once was, but it’s an appreciation we as the audience already have.
Reintroducing the absent father here also seems too on the nose. In many ways, The Exorcist is about the effects of divorce on a child, but this theme works best when it’s implied, when it plays on our emotions indirectly. If we are given too many chances to see Regan’s possession as a metaphor, it loses its power to engage our unconscious.
Our culture may intuit the destructive effects of divorce on children, but it’s not something we want to face up to — we want to see divorce as a rational and neutral way of dealing with a troubled marriage, which children experience as something to be expected in the normal course of things (which they never do.) We have to be tricked into contact with our darker intuitions about the subject — as in movies like The Sixth Sense, which is also a film about divorce masquerading as a horror film.
After father Merrin arrives at the McNeil home to begin the exorcism, Friedkin has restored two scenes of quiet before the ritual begins — a wry and warm exchange in which Chris McNeil gives Merrin some coffee laced with Brandy, and a briefer exchange (above) in which Merrin asks Chris what Regan’s middle name is.
Friedkin has said he thinks these scenes humanize Merrin, and perhaps they do, but they also undercut the impression Merrin gives of an implacable determination to confront the evil in the McNeil home at any cost and without any delay. These displays of courage and haste — because Merrin knows he hasn’t got many human resources left for the task at hand — are emblems of his heroism, and they lose some of their weight in the context of the restored scenes.
When Merrin and Karras take a break in the middle of the exorcism, Blatty had written, and Fiedkin had filmed, an exchange between them, in which Merrin proposes the idea that the target of the demon was never Regan, but the two priests, whose faith the demon hoped to undermine. Friedkin has restored this exchange (above) in his extended cut.
It conveys an interesting idea, and a valid interpretation of Regan’s possession, but it strikes me as too limiting. Surely Regan was not chosen at random — surely her vulnerability as a child of divorce is part of the meaning of the film. Spelling out one facet of that meaning undercuts others, unnecessarily in my view. A good story can resonate on many different levels, and in many different ways, for different viewers.
Blatty’s desire to instruct the audience on the tale’s meaning, to reduce it to one meaning, was misguided.
Finally, Friedkin has restored the original lighthearted coda Blatty included in his screenplay, when Father Dyer and Lieutenant Kinderman (above) start to strike up a friendship. Blatty said this was meant to reassure viewers that all was right with the world again in the wake of Regan’s salvation, but it rings false in the shadow of the great contest between good and evil we’ve just witnessed.
Are we really supposed to believe that this contest has ended with the rescue of one child? The very idea cheapens the thematic grandeur of the tale. We should walk out of The Exorcist in the grip of awe and dread, and perhaps a provisional exaltation — but certainly not with good humor and satisfaction.
I suspect that the observations above accord pretty closely with the thoughts and intuitions of Friedkin when he made his first cut of the film. They were the right thoughts and intuitions and he should have stuck by them.
A new director’s cut has commercial value, of course — it gives people a reason to buy yet another version of the film, and this one is certainly worth taking a look at. Friedkin has also confessed that he restored many of the cut scenes out of affection and respect for Blatty, who has always regretted their loss — and there’s something admirable about that.
Still, the original theatrical cut remains superior and definitive.
William Friedkin’s The Exorcist is a hard film to write about. It doesn’t lend itself to any sort of aesthetic analysis because it makes no appeal to our aesthetic sensibilities. There is only one image in the film which has any kind of aesthetic beauty or power — the shot of Father Merrin arriving at the McNeil house at night in a light fog, adapted for use on the poster. (The image was inspired by a painting by René Magritte.)
There is tremendous craft at work in the film but it might best be described as ruthlessly utilitarian — all of it is designed to unsettle the viewer, to induce a sense of creeping dread, and it does this with irresistible efficiency.
Friedkin has spoken of wanting to give a documentary feel to the look of the film but that’s not quite what he does. The film is carefully lit and mixes artfully composed shots, including tracking shots, with zooms — a mix not normally found in documentaries.
The main effort of the cinematography is to resist glamorizing the settings or the actors — to present them neutrally. Dark scenes and light scenes alternate regularly, to keep the viewer off balance, but the dark scenes are not atmospheric in an expressive way — they’re just set in dark places. (Quiet scenes similarly alternate with loud scenes in the precisely modulated soundtrack.)
The acting, which is uniformly fine, also resists glamorizing any of the characters — its aim is to convey psychologically convincing reactions to extreme and increasingly fantastic events.
You would never fantasize about being any of the characters — you wouldn’t even relish the prospect of spending time with them, with the possible exception of young Regan before and after her possession. And yet you are absolutely riveted by their ordeals, wracked with sympathy and fears for them. This is all extremely unusual for a Hollywood film.
The unease which the film evokes proceeds from everyday anxieties — rats in the attic, a mentally disturbed child, harrowing medical procedures, social humiliation — to supernatural horrors in such well-calculated stages that we are prepared to accept the horrors as mere magnifications, or manifestations, of the familiar anxieties.
It’s an absolutely brilliant exercise in audience manipulation, but the film deals with subjects of such substance and depth that it can’t be dismissed as cynical sensationalism for its own sake.
It’s a great film, but great in ways few other films are, willing to sacrifice artistry for impact, aesthetics for subliminal emotional effects. It’s still, 41 years on, one of the scariest movies ever made, and one of the most affecting.
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Perhaps there are more haunted houses in Los Angeles than in any other city in the world. They are haunted by the fears of their former owners. They smell of divorce, broken contracts, studio politics, bad debts, false friendship, adultery, extravagance, whiskey and lies. Every closet hides the poor little ghost of a stillborn reputation. ‘Go away,’ it whispers,
‘go back where you came from. There is no home here. I was vain and greedy. They flattered me. I failed. You will fail. Go away.’
— Christopher Isherwood
I’ve watched the new Blu-ray edition of Gone With the Wind twice now, once on its own and once with Rudy Behlmer’s excellent and informative commentary.
The film, for all its flaws, is incredibly entertaining, but the sheer visual beauty of it has at times almost reduced me to tears. The beauty is not rooted in its expressive style but in its technical virtuosity — the Technicolor photography, rendered with unprecedented precision through digital restoration, is simply breathtaking.
The techniques of lighting and framing and camera movement are as brilliant, in their way, as any performance in the film, as any passage of dialogue, as any achievement of art direction — the craftsmanship on display in the photography is as moving as the story.
It’s easy to see Vivien Leigh or Margaret Mitchel or David Selznick as Gone With the Wind‘s crucial auteurs, but if you don’t see Victor Fleming, the film’s principle director, and Ernest Haller, the film’s principle cinematographer, as auteurs of equal importance, you’re just not looking hard enough.
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What do the following six films have in common?
Gone With the Wind
The Sound Of Music
Titanic
Doctor Zhivago
The Exorcist
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Well, for one thing they’re all chick flicks of one sort or another, The Exorcist being the least conventional of them — a horror film but a chick flick all the same, with two females, a mother and a daughter, at the center of it and all the male protagonists in supporting roles. The others are romances told principally from the point of view of women.
They also represent six of the ten highest grossing films of all time, in adjusted dollars.
Think about that, consider it in light of contemporary Hollywood’s deep, almost instinctive mistrust of chick flicks. You realize that this mistrust is not rooted in commercial calculation but in the prejudice of the collapsed males who run Hollywood — not in money but in the fear of strong women by men with little teeny tiny dicks.