Macho and savage, The Horsemen is a sports movie for only
the hardiest of viewers. Set in modern-day Afghanistan (circa the early ’70s),
the picture concerns the brutal sport of buzkashi—think polo, but with longer
playing times and with a headless goat carcass in lieu of a ball. Exploring
themes such as male identity and primitive codes of honor, The Horsemen is mildly fascinating as an ethnographic study, but it’s
not an easy film for Westerners to embrace. Even though The Horsemen relies on certain clichés that are common to most
sports movies (and most stories about fathers and sons), the picture is so
thick with virility that it’s a sonnet to manly suffering. In The Horsemen, the best man isn’t the one
who wins, per se; it’s the man who endures the most pain in the pursuit of
winning.
Based on a novel by Joseph Kessel and written by the formidable Dalton
Trumbo—whose previous collaboration with Horseman
director John Frankenheimer, 1968’s The
Fixer, was just as tough and uncompromising—the movie revolves around a
young man trying to win the respect of his unyielding father. Jack Palace,
wearing a mist of old-age makeup over his leathery features, plays Tursen, a
retired buzkashi player who makes a humble but respectable living tending
horses for a wealthy landowner. After grooming his son, Uraz (Omar Sharif), to
become a buzkashi champion, Tursen places a huge wager on Uraz’s performance in
a match, only to watch Uraz lose. Never mind that Uraz suffers a broken leg;
broken pride is all that matters here. Much of the film comprises Uraz’s
excruciating quest to rehabilitate his body for a return to the game, and since
this is a merciless Frankenheimer film, the cure is far worse than the disease.
The Horsemen looks amazing, with
cinematographers André Domage, James Wong Howe, and Claude Renoir conveying the
stark majesty of the Afghan landscape—to say nothing of the ferocious action
during buzkashi matches. Unfortunately, neither Palance nor Sharif is
sufficiently expressive to deliver all of the subtle nuances inherent to the
material. They convey a certain undeniable primal intensity, and each has
affecting moments, but the film would have benefited from performers with
broader emotional palettes. Faring even worse than the male leads is beautiful Leigh
Taylor-Young, cast as a fallen woman who enters Uraz’s life. While she looks
blazingly sexy with her long, dark hair and smoky eye makeup, Taylor-Young is
merely ornamental to a story that’s all about men and their animalistic drives
to impress each other.
The Horsemen: FUNKY
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