Writer-director Michael
Cimino’s magnum opus about greed, which has ironically become shorthand for the profligate excesses of auteur filmmaking, boasts enough commendable
elements for a dozen movies. The story is a thoughtful riff on a fraught period
in American history, the performances are sensitive and textured, the production
values are awesome, and cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond’s images are rapturous.
Had Cimino been able to wrestle this material into shape, either at the time of
the film’s original release or prior to one of its many reissues, he could have
made a classic Hollywood epic. Famously, however, he did not. In its most
widely acclaimed version, Heaven’s Gate
runs three hours and 37 minutes, which is not inherently hubristic; Lawrence of Arabia (1962) is only one
minute shorter. The problem is that Heaven’s
Gate features at least an hour of repetitive material that, no matter how
beautifully filmed, adds nothing to the dramatic experience. Hence, now and
forever, Heaven’s Gate is known as
the debacle that nearly bankrupted United Artists, the disaster that ballooned
from an original budget of $11 million to a final cost of $44 million, and the
death knell for the freedoms that maverick directors enjoyed in the ’70s. Ouch.
The movie begins with a pointless 20-minute prologue that introduces
protagonist Jim Averil (Kris Kristofferson) during his graduation from Harvard
in 1870. The excess of the prologue, which features innumerable extras in
elaborate costumes, is a bad omen. Once the movie cuts 20 years ahead, to 1890
Wyoming, things get moving (more or less). Averil has become a marshal tasked
with overseeing a county populated by impoverished Eastern European immigrants.
In the first volleys of a land war, cattlemen led by Frank Canton (Sam
Waterston) hire gunmen to kill immigrants based on trumped-up charges.
Eventually, a love triangle emerges between Averil, prostitute Ella (Isabelle
Huppert), and gunman Nate Champion (Christopher Walken). Amid various subplots,
the narrative builds toward a showdown between the haves and the have-nots,
with our Principled Antihero caught in between.
Alas, Cimino’s writing is
nowhere near as strong as his direction. When he aims for subtlety, he achieves
muddiness, and when he reaches for profundity, he achieves pretentiousness.
Supporting characters feel underdeveloped, relationships grind through repetitive
rhythms, and everything is grossly overproduced. Some of the film’s gigantic
scenes are powerful, including the final showdown, but some are
laughable—notably the 10-minute roller-skating
scene. Cimino’s missteps are especially disappointing because he gathered
such an interesting cast and, for the most part, gave the actors viable
emotions to play. Kristofferson fares the worst, since his understated screen
persona exacerbates the movie’s lazy pacing, but he connects periodically.
Walken fares the best, his innate eccentricity helping him forge an
individualized character. Yet costars Jeff Bridges and Brad Dourif are almost completely wasted.
Even though it’s possible there’s a great movie buried inside Heaven’s Gate, it becomes more and more
difficult to see potential as the minutes tick by and the problems accumulate. Nonetheless, there’s some comfort it knowing the situation could have been worse. The
first version of Heaven’s Gate that
Cimino showed to understandably flabbergasted United Artists executives was
five hours long.
Heaven’s Gate: FUNKY