Clint Eastwood went to several strange and
interesting places, dramatically speaking, during his late ’60s/early ’70s
transition from playing cowboys to being the fully-realized icon known as Clint
Eastwood. (Dirty Harry,
released in 1971, completed his ascendance.) Eastwood’s wilderness years
featured everything from musicals to war movies, but there’s something
particularly fascinating about The Beguiled and Play Misty for Me,
both released in 1971 (quite a year for Eastwood), because these two movies pit
Eastwood against the unlikely but formidable opponents of scorned women. Of the
pair, The Beguiled is the more provocative, since the narrative of Play
Misty for Me provides an escape valve—the villain of that piece is a
psychopath. In The Beguiled, the principal antagonistic force is the
savagery churning inside Eastwood’s character.
Set in the South during the
Civil War, the picture begins when a young girl, Amy (Pamelyn Ferdin), wanders
through a forest and finds a wounded Union soldier, John (Eastwood). She guides
him back to the boarding school where she lives with a handful of other young
women, some of whom are near adulthood. The school is run by tough but
psychologically fragile Martha (Geraldine Page). Initially, Martha says
John should be handed over to Rebel soldiers, but, as do the other females in
the school, she becomes enchanted by the handsome stranger. While John is
nursed back to health, he woos not only Martha but also her second-in-command,
the virginal Edwina (Elizabeth Hartman). Meanwhile, coquettish Carol (Jo Ann
Harris) makes her sexual desires plain to John. Thus begins a dark odyssey
involving betrayal, lies, schemes, and temptation. John plays every angle to
his advantage, figuring he’ll soon be well enough to exit the school on his own
power, and each woman with whom he builds a relationship accepts the face he
shows to her. (As viewers, we know he’s lying to all of them.)
Director Don
Siegel, the reliable B-movie helmer who emerged during this period as
Eastwood’s mentor, does some of his best-ever work in The Beguiled,
employing the candlelit interiors and mossy exteriors of the Southern setting
to create powerful visual metaphors—the school at the center of the story is a
fertile place where wild passions grow. Siegel also stages the movie like a
slow-burn horror story, and the revenge Martha takes on John once she realizes
his true nature is memorably brutal.
The Beguiled runs a little long,
and a director with a subtler touch could have added further dimensions, but
nearly everything in the movie works, at least to some degree. Furthermore, the
female performances are so good that they sell the story’s premise. Page is stern and twitchy, adding a thread of Gothic grandeur, while Harris,
Hartman, and the other supporting ladies present a spectrum of complicated
femininity. Eastwood stretches to the outside edges of his skill set, but the
role neatly twists his macho energy into menace. While it’s tempting to brand The
Beguiled as misogynistic cinema (the same criticism often lobbed at Play
Misty for Me), the picture has too many dimensions to support that
simplistic a reading. In the world of The Beguiled, everyone is guilty
of succumbing to vile impulses.
The
Beguiled: GROOVY
I've always loved this movie. But it's Geraldine Page, not Fitzgerald who stars in it. Both great actresses to be sure, but this is one of Page's greatest screen performances.
ReplyDeleteFixed, thanks!
ReplyDeleteThis movie was, for the longest time, a trivia answer for me. I'm pretty sure that up until Gran Torino, The Beguiled was the only movie that Clint Eastwood ever died in.
ReplyDeleteGreat film, save for Clint's distracting, utterly 70's hair. ;)
ReplyDeleteKevin: Eastwood's character died in HONKYTONK MAN (1982) as well.
ReplyDeleteClint's character died in Bridges Of Madison County also, my favorite movie.
ReplyDelete