Of the many peculiar ’70s
subgenres for which I have undying fondness, the revisionist Western is perhaps
the most rewarding. Filmmakers in the ’70s went nuts overturning the tropes of
a beloved Hollywood genre, using gritty realism to transform Westerns into
social commentary. Those highfalutin ambitions go a long way toward explaining Zandy’s Bride, the story of a grudging
romance that develops between a son-of-a-bitch rancher and his mail-order
bride. While the underlying story is familiar, the sort of thing John Wayne
might have made in the ’40s or ’50s, the execution is unsentimental. It’s hard
to envision Wayne proclaiming, as the lead character in this film does, that he
doesn’t need his wife for sex, because he’s content with “the five sisters,”
meaning the fingers of his right hand. Similarly, it’s difficult to picture the
Duke ditching his long-suffering spouse every time the local tramp comes
sniffing around. None of this should create the illusion that Zandy’s Bride fully overcomes the trite
rhythms of its storyline. Rather, these remarks should contextualize Zandy’s Bride as a nasty ride through
terrain that, seen previously, might have seemed idyllic.
Gene Hackman, adding
yet another scowling meanie to his gallery of cinematic pricks, is frightening
as reclusive rancher Zandy Allen. Eking out a rugged existence on his small
California homestead, he sends away for a spouse, expecting nothing more than
someone to share his workload and spew children. Matching Hackman’s energy is
the formidable Swedish actress Liv Ullmann, who plays Hannah Lund, the woman
who accepts Zandy’s overture. She alienates Zandy the moment she arrives,
because she’s in her 30s and not the dewy young thing he expected. Having left
her old life behind, so she has no choice but to endure his abuse for as long
as she can. Once the couple experiences assorted frontier travails together,
they fight burgeoning affection, as if warmth is a sign of weakness. Yet the
more they fortify their respective emotional boundaries, the more they realize
they’re compatible enough to coexist.
The picture’s evocative portrayal of the
natural world makes sense, seeing as how director Jan Troell previously made
the acclaimed foreign films The Emigrants
(1971) and The New Land (1972), which
dramatized the experiences of Swedish people relocating to the American
frontier. The film’s dour portrait of life for women in the Wild West also rings
true, and vivid characterizations by supporting players Frank Cady, Eileen
Heckart, Harry Dean Stanton, and especially Susan Tyrell add to the effect.
Though Zandy’s Bride is too long at
116 minutes, the ending pays things off nicely, and the picture is replete with
gorgeous images: Cinematographer Jordan Cronenweth creates the palpable sense
of a frontier that’s simultaneously liberating and oppressive.
Zandy’s Bride: GROOVY
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