Possibly the grisliest
adaptation of a Jules Verne novel ever made, The Light at the Edge of the World depicts the conflict
between a gang of pirates and the lone survivor of a lighthouse crew on a
remote island. Kirk Douglas plays the survivor with clenched-teeth intensity
and nimble physicality, Yul Brynner offers an interesting contrast by
portraying the main villain as a sadist with the courtly manners of a European
gentleman, and the action unfolds on rocky
terrain so barren that it might as well be the surface of the moon. Those seeking the lighthearted
escapism one normally associates with Verne’s fiction should look elsewhere,
because this is a brutal picture featuring a beheading, gang rape, and a
horrific scene of a man being flayed alive. That could be why The Light at the Edge of the World fared
poorly during its initial release, because viewers presumably expected something
like Douglas’ previous Verne exploit, the family-friendly 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954).
It should also be noted that The Light at the Edge of the World has no discernible thematic content, so it’s not as if the producers tried to elevate Verne’s pulpy storytelling. Viewed unfavorably, The Light at the Edge of the World is a Saturday-matinee adventure gone wrong. Viewed favorably, it’s a pirate picture that avoids romanticizing outlaws.
It should also be noted that The Light at the Edge of the World has no discernible thematic content, so it’s not as if the producers tried to elevate Verne’s pulpy storytelling. Viewed unfavorably, The Light at the Edge of the World is a Saturday-matinee adventure gone wrong. Viewed favorably, it’s a pirate picture that avoids romanticizing outlaws.
The movie opens with the arrival of
a three-man crew on a remote island. Assistant lightkeeper Will Denton
(Douglas) is the crew’s outlier, since his companions are an old man at the end
of his career and a young man just starting his. (Clues about Will’s tragic
past are sprinkled throughout the movie, though the backstory payoff is
underwhelming.) One day, a pirate ship sails into the island’s harbor, and
marauders under the command of Jonathan Kongre (Brynner) murder Will’s
compatriots. Despite briefly evading capture, Will is apprehended and used for
sport by the vicious Jonathan. Only a brazen leap off a high cliff saves Will’s
life. Eventually, the pirates dismantle the lighthouse and trick another ship
into crashing upon deadly reefs. The pirates kill all the survivors except
pretty Arabella (Samantha Eggar), whom Jonathan takes for a plaything, and the
ship’s engineer, whom Will rescues. These two men plot revenge against the
pirates.
Despite being overlong at two hours and change, The Light at the Edge of the World is quite consistent. Not only do
the filmmakers steer clear of swashbuckling fluff, but they allow the story to
grow darker as it progresses—in one demented scene, Jonathan’s sexually
ambiguous henchman cross-dresses so he can torment Arabella with a weird dance.
Although Douglas has never been the subtlest of actors, he fares well in this
milieu, conveying a mixture of brokenhearted angst, righteous anger, and sheer
terror. Brynner, conversely, camps it up by grinning and laughing while his
character commissions one atrocity after another. Naturally, these two
big-screen alpha males have at each other during the requisite action-packed
finale.
The Light at the Edge of the World: GROOVY
As the most dedicated movie fan in town at age 13 I was allowed to go see this GP rated "Jules Verne movie" alone one early evening - no problem. Yes i thought it would be perhaps at least something like 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea or even my favorite JV movie, Mysterious Island. Holy crap. It bothered me a lot, and i was a sophisticated enough young teen to be annoyed at the filmmakers and wondered what exactly they thought they were at. I finally saw it again last year and braced myself. Yes still grim. Yes still strangely off putting. But at least it seems to have a singular vision. I'd remembered clearly the helpless man being strung up and flayed alive, but i had no recollection of Samantha Egger's horrible fate.
ReplyDeleteWe only she her being taken in to the ship and assume her rape is about to take place just before Douglas hits the gun powder supply. He manages to kill all the remaining crew, and poor Samantha, while setting up the showdown with Yul.
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