After making a strong
directorial debut with 1971’s Play Misty
for Me, Clint Eastwood decided to put his stamp on the genre that
originally made him famous as an actor: the Western. Yet instead of simply
churning out a moralistic shoot-’em-up in the John Wayne mold, Eastwood made High Plains Drifter, a creepy revenge
tale so heavily allegorical it might actually be a ghost story. Considering
this was only his second directing job, Eastwood’s artistic ambition is
impressive. Yet while the movie is brisk, nasty, and stylish, it has major narrative weaknesses. One big problem is that the protagonist is a cipher—we never
learn the character’s background, name, or true motivation—and another is the
way the movie fails to clarify whether onscreen events are happening in
“reality” or taking place in a supernatural netherworld. Eastwood gets points for
attacking heavy themes, but his inability to bring everything together is
disappointing.
The story begins when a character referred to as the Stranger
(Eastwood) rides into the lakeside frontier town of Lago. He gets into a hassle
with a group of thugs, and then kills all of them with his frightening gunplay.
Impressed, the townspeople ask the Stranger to plan an ambush: Three murderers who have just been released from prison are pledged to ravage Lago, so the townspeople are terrified. Courtesy of (confusing)
exposition and flashbacks, we learn that some time ago, the murderers
slaughtered Lago’s do-gooder sheriff while the townspeople watched—and that the
tragedy stemmed from a conspiracy related to the mine from which the town
derives its livelihood. Furthermore, Eastwood’s character may or may not actually be the
sheriff’s reincarnation and/or spirit—never mind the fact that no one
recognizes him.
Anyway, the Stranger is given carte-blanche throughout Lago,
so he installs a local dwarf (Billy Curtis) as the new mayor/sheriff, seizes a
local tramp (Marianna Hill) as his personal concubine, and makes the
townspeople paint all of Lago’s buildings red so the town looks like a vision
of hell. This sets the stage for a showdown with the murderers, although the
townspeople start to wonder if their “savior” is worse than the killers he’s
been hired to fight.
The gist of the piece is painfully obvious right from the
beginning—the people of Lago are being punished for their sins—but the script,
by Ernest Tidyman, muddies the narrative waters. The Stranger is a
bloodthirsty, crude, sarcastic outlaw capable of violent sexual assaults, so
it’s not as if he’s the personification of justice. Therefore, the movie has
virtually no morality on display, making it difficult to care what happens to
any of the film’s characters. And since the movie doesn’t compensate for this
deficit by providing a tidy parable, what’s the point? Still, High Plains Drifter looks great,
especially during the moody nighttime scenes, and Eastwood surrounds himself
with interesting faces. Curtis stands out as the town’s perverse voice of
conscience, and Eastwood favorite Geoffrey Lewis is effectively odious as the
leader of the murderers.
High Plains Drifter: FUNKY
1 comment:
I'd say CE's character is a ghostly incarnation of Lago's sheriff who was murdered by the entire town. That's his background. His motivation is revenge. Even at the end when Mordecai says he never knew his name,Clint says"Yes you do." In front of the sheriff's grave! DUH! How anyone could miss that is beyond me.
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