While
it's easy to see why Twilight's Las Gleaming tanked at the box
office during its original release and remains, at best, a minor cult favorite
to this day, the movie is a lively addition to the venerable tradition of loopy
conspiracy flicks. Featuring an outlandish plot about a crazed U.S. general seizing
control of a nuclear-missile launch site in order to force the president to
reveal secret documents about America's involvement in Vietnam, the picture is
far-fetched in the extreme. It's also ridiculously overlong, sprawling over two
and a half hours. Furthermore, gonzo director Robert Aldrich filigrees the
story with such unnecessary adornments as split-screen photography, which he
uses to simultaneously show the goings-on at the launch site and the reactions
of power-brokers in Washington, D.C. Plus, of course, the storyline is downbeat
in every imaginable way. For adventurous moviegoers, however, these weaknesses
are just as easily interpreted as strengths, particularly when the
entertainment value of the acting is taken into consideration.
Burt Lancaster stars
as the general, memorably incarnating a macho idealist who uses duplicity and strategy
to manipulate enemies and subordinates alike. Charles Durning, rarely cast as
authority figures beyond the level of middle management, makes an unlikely
president, his innate likability and the darkness that always simmered beneath
his persona offering a complex image of humanistic leadership. Also populating
the movie are leather-faced tough guy Richard Widmark, as the officer charged
with wresting control of the launch site from the general’s gang; Paul Winfield
and Burt Young, as two members of the gang; and reliable veterans Roscoe Lee
Browne, Joseph Cotten, Melvyn Douglas, and Richard Jaeckel (to say nothing of
Blacula himself, William Marshall). Quite a tony cast for a whackadoodle
thriller that borders on science fiction.
Based on a novel by Walter Wager, Twilight's
Last Gleaming represents Aldrich's bleeding-heart storytelling at its most
arch—the goal of Lancaster's character is revealing that the U.S. government
knew Vietnam was a lost cause but kept fighting, at great cost of blood and
treasure, simply to intimidate the Soviet Union. If there's a single ginormous
logical flaw in the picture (in fact, there are probably many), it's that
Lancaster's character could have achieved his goal through simpler means. But the
ballsy contrivance of the picture is that seizing the launch site is a
theatrical gesture meant to capture the world's attention. As such, the
operatic bloat of Twilight's Last Gleaming reflects the
protagonist's modus operandi--like the crusading general, Aldrich swings for
the fences. Twilight's Last Gleaming is a strange hybrid of hand-wringing
political drama (somewhat in the Rod Serling mode) with guns-a-blazin' action—for
better or worse, there's not another movie like this one. Genuine novelty is a
rare virtue, and so is the passion with which Aldrich made this offbeat
picture.
Twilight's Last Gleaming: GROOVY
"Ballsy Contrivance" That will be my new band name... lol... great review. I barely remember this and now I want to see it again.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen this since I saw it in the theater. I remember liking it a lot. Movies that threaten the end of the world really hit my sweet spot.
ReplyDeleteI also love movies where iconic movie heroes play the bad guy.
TLG was a childhood fav growing up, and MIA on DVD for years until 2012. It holds up pretty well after all these years, though some of your criticisms are valid. I wrote about TLG on my own site here: http://davesmovieguide.blogspot.com/2012/11/twilights-last-gleaming-stars-have.html
ReplyDeleteBTW: Love your site!
The movie would have been over very quickly if the Army had simply fed a lethal dose of nerve gas into the ventilation system of the silo, which is accessible from the outside. In fact, the existence of such a weapon is established early on when Lancaster defuses a booby trap that employs ricin.
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