There’s
a good reason you’ve likely never heard of a Western called Eagle’s Wing: It tells such a diffuse
and underdeveloped story that even with dynamic actors Martin Sheen and Sam Waterston
starring, the picture is painfully dull. On the plus side, the
movie looks gorgeous—director Anthony Harvey and cinematographer Billy Williams arrange visuals with artful precision. Yet the only thing more dispiriting than
Harvey’s lethargic pacing is the director’s inability to fuse his narrative’s
various strands. Eagle’s Wing bounces around between
vignettes involving Plains Indians, white fur traders, a displaced Irish priest
and his sister, and the denizens of a Mexican hacienda. The various characters
eventually converge, more or less, but it’s a long haul getting to the point
where the story feels unified. Worse, since the heart of the piece is really
just a simplistic macho duel between an Indian (Waterston) and a trader
(Sheen), everything else feels like a distraction.
Before moving onto anything else, by the way, it’s worth noting that Waterston’s casting as a Native American isn’t as ridiculous as it might seem. Yes, there were plenty of Native actors would could have played his role, and yes, Waterston is a Northeastern WASP, but with his lean physicality, massive eyebrows, prominent nose, thin eyes, and generally sober demeanor, the actor cuts a striking figure.
Before moving onto anything else, by the way, it’s worth noting that Waterston’s casting as a Native American isn’t as ridiculous as it might seem. Yes, there were plenty of Native actors would could have played his role, and yes, Waterston is a Northeastern WASP, but with his lean physicality, massive eyebrows, prominent nose, thin eyes, and generally sober demeanor, the actor cuts a striking figure.
The plot isn’t worth
describing in detail except to say that the Indian and the trader begin their
duel over possession of a horse, and then deepen their conflict once the Indian
abducts the priest’s sister. (English actress Caroline Langrishe, playing the girl, lends grit and loveliness but has virtually nothing to do
except suffer and watch while male characters advance the narrative.) The
reason the plot isn’t worth describing is that it doesn’t seem
to be of particular importance to the filmmakers—Eagle’s Wing is primarily a mood piece about desperation,
obsession, and survival. However, these themes are not dramatized effectively. Many
of Sheen’s sequences, for instance, comprise the actor soliloquizing in order
to explain what his character is thinking. (It’s a rare movie that
makes one wish Sheen would stop talking, given that he possesses one of
Hollywood’s most mesmerizing voices.)
Further, the film is littered with
wordless scenes in which nothing of significance happens, or in which
significant events are shown at excessive length—such as an interminable scene
of Sheen’s character breaking a horse. Virtually the only stretch of the film that sustains interest is the long opening sequence featuring Harvey Keitel; he
and Sheen play bickering partners until Keitel’s character meets the business
end of an arrow. Nonetheless, if you’re able to groove on a movie
simply for the beauty of its visuals, you might be able to do so with Eagle’s Wing, at least for a while, because the film offers an endless procession of elegantly minimalistic
images sculpted from subtle textures of color and light.
Eagle’s Wing: FUNKY
Two trivia items about this - it was produced by Peter Shaw ( Angela Lansbury's husband) and it was written by JohnBriley who would later go on to write and win an Oscar for Gandhi.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen this since I saw it in the theater when it was first released. I remember loving it, and telling folks it was on my list of best westerns ever. Time for a re-watch.
ReplyDeleteI'm also pretty sure that this was the first time I;
d ever encountered these actors.
Does anyone know the name of the grey Arabian horse in the movie ? It's the horse they both want so badly.... He is supposed to be a Mustang, but he is definitely a purebred Arabian. I'm just curious what his name is so I can look at his breeding/bloodlines.... Thank you to anyone who knows
ReplyDeleteI have googled it and can't find the beautiful Arabian horse's name.
ReplyDeleteEs un ejemplar cartujano.De herencia cordobesa.
ReplyDelete