Yet another lurid
adventure flick set in occupied Europe during World War II, The Passage is mildly fascinating for
what it lacks—depth and restraint. The plot is so thin that it can be described in one sentence without excluding any significant details: Members of the
French resistance ask a farmer living near the French-Spanish border to help an
American scientist and his family reach safety while a psychotic SS officer
chases after them. That’s the whole storyline, give or take a couple of
incidental characters, and the preceding synopsis also describes nearly
everything we learn about the characters. Especially considering that the
script was written by a novelist adapting his own work—a gentleman named Bruce
Nicolaysen—it’s astonishing to encounter a narrative this underdeveloped.
Furthermore, director J. Lee Thompson, a veteran who by this point in his
career seemed content cranking out mindless potboilers, lets actors do whatever
the hell they want. In some cases, as with sexy supporting player Kay Lenz,
this translates to bored non-acting, and in others, as with main villain
Maclolm McDowell, the permissiveness results in outrageous over-acting. Alternating between bug-eyed malevolence and effeminate delicacy, McDowell presents
something that’s not so much a performance as a compendium of bad-guy clichés;
he’s entertaining in weird moments like his revelation of a swastika-festooned
jockstrap, but it seems Thompson never asked McDowell to rein in his
flamboyance.
That said, The Passage
is quite watchable if one accepts the movie on its trashy terms. The simplistic
plot ensures clarity from beginning to end (notwithstanding the lack of a
satisfactory explanation for the scientist’s importance), and Thompson fills
the screen with energetic camerawork, nasty violence, and, thanks to Lenz,
gratuitous nudity. It should also be noted that leading man Anthony Quinn, who
plays the farmer, invests his scenes with macho angst, and that costar James
Mason, as the scientist, elevates his scenes with crisp diction and plaintive
facial expressions. (The cast also includes Christopher Lee, as a gypsy helping
the fugitives, and Patricia Neal, as the scientist’s frail wife.) Even more
noteworthy than any of the performances, however, is the gonzo finale, during
which Thompson’s style briefly transforms from indifferent to insane—for a few
strange moments, The Passage becomes a
gory horror show. (Available
as part of the MGM Limited Collection on Amazon.com)
The Passage: FUNKY
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