Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Squee! Squee!

Film: Deliverance
Format: DVD from personal collection on Sue’s Mother’s Day present.

If there are two things that everyone, even those who haven’t seen it, know about Deliverance, it’s the opening with “Dueling Banjos” and Ned Beatty being forced to squeal like a pig. There’s a lot more to this film, of course, but those two things are by far the most memorable. This is a film that in many ways defined a particular part of the world. Just as Jaws made beaches a lot scarier and Fatal Attraction made the idea of marital infidelity a lot less attractive, Deliverance put the fear of the backwoods and the inbred into the city folk. This is not without good reason.

In many ways, Deliverance is a high concept film: “Four city men paddle down a river and run into significant trouble with the locals.” Getting there, though, puts us through a terribly rough ride. Once things start to go bad, they don’t stop. Deliverance takes its time for the first 40 minutes or so and then accelerates into increasing amounts of real, believable terror for the next hour or so.

A group of four men from Atlanta decide to take one last trip down the Cahulawassee River, because in a few days, the river will disappear. The government is planning to flood the river valley, turning the whole area into a massive lake that will be dammed as a power source. The four men are experienced woodsman Lewis (Burt Reynolds), similarly experienced but less assured Ed (Jon Voight), and relative newbies Drew (Ronny Cox) and Bobby (Ned Beatty). It’s evident right away that these four men hold the locals in some disdain and don’t take them very seriously. Drew and an evidently inbred local (Billy Redden) play “Dueling Banjos” together, but the local refuses to shake Drew’s hand when the duet is finished. Lewis hires a few others to drive their cars down river so they can pick them up on Sunday.

The first day passes pretty uneventfully. It’s not until the second day of the trip when things get difficult. The two canoes get separated, with Ed and Bobby out in front. They pull over to the shore to wait for the other canoe and they have a run-in with some local color. What this means is that Ed is tied to a tree and Bobby is forcibly raped at gunpoint. Just as it’s about to be Ed’s turn, Drew and Lewis show up. Lewis, an experienced huntsman, shoots the rapist through the back (literally through him—the arrow pokes out a good foot in the front), killing him while the accomplice runs off.

This sets up the last hour of the film. The four men have to decide exactly what they’re going to do next. They have a body on their hands. Drew wants to take the body back to civilization with them, convinced that the law will do right by them, considering what happened. Lewis, knowing that the area will be a couple of hundred feet under water soon enough thinks they should simply bury the body so it will never be found. Bobby agrees, wanting the whole thing to stay hushed up. Ed finally relents.

From this point forward, things go from bad to worse. Drew falls out of his canoe just as they are going through some rapids. The canoes wreck, and Lewis breaks his leg badly. Additionally, the three remaining campers believe with reason that they are being pursued by the accomplice of the dead man.

In some ways, it’s unfair that Deliverance is best remembered for the two things that everyone remembers because there is a lot more here than just an inbred banjo player and Ned Beatty in his underpants. This is a tightly-wound film from the moment things start to go bad until the ending moments, one that contains any number of horrifying sights and visions made all the more terrible because they are entirely within the bounds of reality.

And really, I’m not sure higher praise can be given to a film than this: it is terrifying in a way that few films are. Its strength is that it takes these four men, so confident in their own world of the city, and places them in a location where they are essentially powerless. It’s incredibly effective in no small part because it’s so easy to imagine oneself in the exact same position. I’ve been canoeing and camping, and while there are moments of fun and excitement, even without hillbilly rapist mountain men around, there are plenty of scares for the inexperienced. Perhaps the most terrifying thing is seeing Lewis, so confident at the start of the film, reduced to tears of pain and fear when they come through a final set of rapids.

In other words, it’s easy to see why Deliverance is so highly respected. I’m not sure I’ll watch this again soon, but I can’t say I’m sad that it’s a part of my personal collection.

Why to watch Deliverance: As good a thriller as made in the last 50 years.
Why not to watch: Ned Beatty in tighty whities.

10 comments:

  1. I had no idea what I was in for when I first saw this movie, and thus no idea how incredible it was going to be. I agree completely with your review. If I could add anything, it would be (1) "Deliverance" employs the same unnerving psychological tactic that "Aliens" does by taking out the most competent-seeming guy first (in "Aliens," Sergeant Apone is one of the very first to be cocooned). You hit the nail on the head when you talked about Lewis's downfall. And (2): hats off to the actor in the foreground of the image at the head of your blog post-- the dead rapist! The camera was on that actor for at least a full minute, and he never once blinked or twitched. Now that's acting!

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    1. Evidently, he trained himself to hold his breath and not blink for as long as two minutes just so he could do that scene.

      Additionally, Ronny Cox was able to contort his body in significant ways, allowing him to be involved in particular scenes so that a dummy didn't need to be used for him.

      The director, John Boorman, also did Excalibur and the vastly underrated Point Blank. Of course, he also did Zardoz, so your mileage may vary on Boorman fandom.

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  2. This is a movie where it's popularity ruined it for me. It's a terrific film, but having heard about it over and over for years when I finally sat down to watch it I already knew all that was going to happen which took a lot of the surprise and suspense out of it.

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    1. Completely understandable. It's the same reason I've never read "The Hitchhiker's Guide" books (yes, I know. Pull your jaw up). There's no way they can live up to the hype.

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  3. True Story: Right after I got out of college in the 80s I had little money to live on so I stayed home and watched a lot of movies on a cable station out of Boston. It was the start of my movie watching "career". One of the films I saw was Deliverance. I liked it quite a bit. I went in to work the next day and was talking it up to an older co-worker. She was looking skeptical and asked me, "what about the rape scene?" My response was, "what rape scene?"

    Apparently the Boston cable station had cut that scene from their broadcast of the movie. It wasn't like they were ABC or CBS, but neither were they HBO. They ran ads on their channel, so apparently they removed this scene from the film, worried it would offend. I had no idea that such a scene was in the movie. To this day I have still never seen that scene and I really have no desire to do so.

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    1. It's ugly, but I think it's necessary to understanding the rest of the film. Without that, there's no reason for Burt Reynolds to shoot the guy through with an arrow and no motivation for the rest of the film.

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  4. Nice write up. And yeah, it's very unfortunate that this is remembered for one scene that hardly encapsulates the tone of the film.

    I love the banjo scene. I love music scenes in film, and as bleak as the rest of the film is, I'm endlessly fascinated by that early sequence.

    I group Deliverance with Straw Dogs. They're both about regular, everyday people who find themselves in situations where they are pushed to the extreme. And they both explore the question "If your very survival came into question, just how far would you go to protect yourself?" The answer isn't pretty in either film. In fact, it's pretty damn scary in both.

    My mother saw Deliverance in its original theatrical release, and she still talks about how it scared the crap out of her.

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    1. Yeah, I absolutely see the connection to Straw Dogs. As you say, the answer isn't pretty, but I'm not sure the answer to that question is ever pretty. That, I think, is what makes these films so interesting. Seeing someone trained to survive and kill (The Bourne Identity, for instance) can be fun, but it's not nearly as visceral.

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  5. This is high praise from you, Steve. I wish I could share it, but I am only partway there. This is a tough ride for all four, or three survivors and there is a lot there for them to feel terrible about, yet they all, Lewis perhaps excepted, feel mostly bad for the one right thing they did out there. They were in a kill or be killed moment with two types whom it was very difficult to feel sorry for. I am not for killing anybody, but according to Hollywood morale they did right protecting themselves from the hillbillies, yet the theme of the movie is how terrible that was. In a way this is the opposite end of the spectrum from Dirty Harry and I think the balance must be somewhere in between. I know I would feel pretty shit about underestimating the river and the locals and taking Drew into something that cost him his life. I would feel much less shit about those two assholes.

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    1. There's a documentary about American horror movies (Nightmares in Red, White and Blue--I recommend it highly) that mentions many an action movie shows the heroes killing bad guy after bad guy with no remorse and with genuine pleasure. It's in horror movies that we frequently see someone driven to kill and being haunted by that reality. That might be kind of the point here.

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