Film Review
Wind Across the Everglades
should have been Nicholas Ray's masterpiece. There are some who
even consider it as such but the majority opinion is, whilst Ray's
distinctive imprint is felt in almost every frame, it is one of the
director's lesser works, a great film that was botched in its final
stages of production after Ray fell out with the film's writer and
co-producer Budd Schulberg. Flawed as the film is, it has an
enchanting raw beauty about it, a work that resonates with a love of
the natural world and the unfathomable nature of the human
spirit. With its strident conservationist theme it was many years
ahead of its time but what the film is really about is the mysterious
quality that human beings have for forming relationships in the most
unlikely of situations.
It was at Ray's insistence that all the film's exteriors (which make up
the bulk of the film's runtime) be shot on location in Florida.
This presented an enormous challenge for the cast and production team,
and the resulting stresses were certainly a contributing factor in the
breakdown of the relationship between Ray and his producers. With
most of the location filming in the can, Ray was physically and emotionally
in no condition to complete the shooting and so Schulberg took over,
having dismissed the director. The change in style of direction
is painfully evident in the final sequences of the film, but what
perhaps most hurts the film is the Schulbergs' decision to exclude Ray
from the editing. Scenes that Ray particularly cherished were
inexplicably excised, with the result that
Wind Across the Everglades feels
jarringly paced, a succession of brilliantly crafted set-pieces that
fail to meld into a satisfying hole.
What holds the film together and makes it so memorable is the
extraordinary rapport between its two lead actors, Christopher Plummer
(in his first leading role) and Burl Ives. Plummer's naive and
idealistic game warden is worlds apart from Ives' cunning and
treacherous poacher, and yet both characters appeal to us and clearly
have a profound mutual admiration, if not liking, for one
another. The forging of a bond between opposites is to be found
in many of Ray's films but here it is particularly striking, a perverse
friendship that springs from the most unlikely of circumstances,
revealing in Ray a remarkable awareness of the complexity of human
relationships. It is a feature of his films that the characters
are as contradictory and unpredictable as they are in real life.
People
never behave like they
do in the movies.
Another curious aspect of the film is its downright eccentric cast,
which includes the renowned circus clown Emmett Kelly, stripper Gypsy
Rose Lee, boxer Tony Galento and journalist/writer MacKinlay
Kantor. Peter Falk also shows up in his first film appearance,
exactly one decade before he made his debut in his most famous role as
Lieutenant Columbo. It is a colourful ensemble that adds to the
film's weird sense of authenticity, which is most keenly felt in the
unforgettable sequence in which the high-minded hero (Plummer) and
resolute villain (Ives) set aside their differences and embark on a
wild drinking binge in which they become bosom pals. It has to be
seen to be believed.
Imperfect as it is,
Wind Across the
Everglades stands as one of Nicholas Ray's most spiritual and
visually compelling films. The stunning panoramic shots of the
Everglades would not be out of place in a first class wildlife
documentary and endow the film with a beauty that both enchants the eye
and touches the heart. It is hard to think of another American
film of this era that has such an intense involvement with the natural
world, nor one in which the humanity of its director is as keenly
felt. And, in a strange way, its shortcomings add to its charm,
robbing it of that hideous synthetic veneer that clings to most
Hollywood films of this time and makes them appear, to varying degrees,
phoney and contrived. Whatever else it may be,
Wind Across the Everglades
certainly isn't phoney.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the early 1900s, an idealistic young schoolteacher named Walt
Murdock arrives in Miami, Florida, to take up a new post. Moments
after his arrival he picks a fight with the locals when he rails
against a woman for wearing a bird's feather in her hat. No one
wants to hear Murdock's appeal that the latest fashion for wearing
feathers is driving certain species of bird to extinction. He
loses his job but ends up being hired as a game warden, his main task
being to prevent the illegal killing of birds for their plumage.
Murdock soon runs into the most fearsome of poachers in the Everglades,
Cottonmouth, an outcast from society who has absolutely no intention of
giving up his way of life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.