Enjoyed for its surface
pleasures, The Electric Horseman is a
diverting romantic adventure servicing such quintessentially ’70s themes as the
dangers of rampant corporate control, the exploitive nature of mass media, the
nobility of nonviolent rebellion, and the travails of rugged individualism—it’s
a popcorn movie offering ideas in addition to star power and visual spectacle.
The title character is Sonny Steele (Robert Redford), a self-loathing former
rodeo champion who works as a spokesman for a brand of breakfast cereal.
Shuffling through a degrading life of personal appearances, photo shoots, store
openings, and the like, Sonny is perpetually drunk and rarely on time or
prepared, so he’s on the verge of getting fired from his cushy gig.
Meanwhile,
the corporation that employs him has adopted as its mascot a retired racehorse
called Rising Star, which is valued at $12 million. When Sonny arrives in Las
Vegas for an event at which he’s expected to ride Rising Star during a garish
stage show, he realizes that the magnificent animal has been drugged to ensure
compliance, which offends Sonny’s long-suppressed nobility. Strapping on his
lightbulb-festooned costume—hence the movie’s title—Sonny climbs onto Rising
Star’s saddle and rides the horse right out of a casino and into the
surrounding desert, stealing the animal with the goal of setting it free. The
purpose of this grand gesture, of course, is redeeming Sonny’s sense of honor
and self-worth.
Yet because this is a Sydney Pollack movie—the fifth of seven pictures
the fine director made with his pal Redford—The
Electric Horseman also includes a love story. Hallie Martin (Jane Fonda) is
an ambitious TV reporter who spots Sonny’s bad attitude well before he steals
Rising Star, and then dogs him once his actions elevate Sonny to folk-hero status.
Eventually, Hallie joins Sonny on the trail and they evolve from idealistically
opposed sparring partners to simpatico lovers. As sometimes happens in
Pollack’s pictures, the romantic angle feels forced and unnecessary, partially
because it slows the momentum of the main narrative and partially because the
script contorts itself to make Sonny and Hallie equally interesting. Although
Redford seems completely comfortable in his Western-iconoclast role, Fonda
struggles to mesh the authentic and ersatz aspects of her contrived character. Worse, since the real love story in
the movie is between Sonny and Rising Star—by escaping the corporate system
together, they redeem each other—the Hallie character’s presence is ultimately
superfluous.
Nonetheless, The Electric
Horseman is filled with glamorous filmmaking and terrific acting. Redford
dominates, naturally, though Fonda seizes strong moments whenever she can, and
crusty Western types including Wilford Brimley and singer-songwriter Willie
Nelson (in his first dramatic performance) lend credibility. On a fundamental
level, The Electric Horseman is hypocritical
horseshit—an expensive studio movie railing against money-loving
corporations—but somewhere amid the hollow posturing is a sweet fable about
freedom.
The Electric Horseman: FUNKY
4 comments:
Never saw it, but it was one of my Mom's favorites.
The movie in which Willie utters the charming line "I'm gonna find me one of them Keno girls that can suck the chrome off a trailer hitch."
> The movie in which Willie utters the charming
> line "I'm gonna find me one of them Keno
> girls that can suck the chrome off a trailer
> hitch."
I remember seeing a few minutes of a cable special about Nelson in the '90s in which Pollack said that that ad-libbed line, to his surprise, sailed right past the MPAA when they saw "The Electric Horseman" for the first time. He was sure going in that he'd have to cut it.
By the way, terrific blog, Peter! I'm glad I stumbled across it.
"Hypocritical horseshit -- an expensive studio movie railing against money-loving corporations. "
Exactly how I felt about "Avatar," a HUGELY expensive studio movie years in the making, to birth its groundbreaking technology, that railed against groundbreaking technology (computers and corporations evil, sticks and stones noble).
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