EQUUS: Blu-ray (UA 1977) Twilight Time
At the crux of
Sidney Lumet’s Equus (1977) lies a
tragedy of almost Median proportions; of man’s inability to comprehend – nee,
to make peace with - his limited understanding of the infinite; to resolve
within himself that epic conflict of the soul, ever-parched to experience
ecstasies reserved for the Gods, yet bound by earthly constraints in the
quagmire of its own concrete form. Such inescapable ‘passion’ conjured, then magnified with the onset of awkward
adolescence, is brought to even more ravishing fruition in the world-weary man
who attempts – through more profound reason - to deconstruct its corrosive
nature. To appease rather than satisfy, then tranquilize instead of nurture the
interminable, this elder statesman will snuff out its fiery brand on a young man’s
heart; trading one prison – abject despair – for quite another: normalcy.
All of these
deeper thoughts are profoundly expressed in Peter Schaffer’s 1973 Tony
Award-winning play. On stage, Equus’
pronounced repudiation of the natural world was scintillating; the dismantling
of mis-perceived madness afflicting the impressionable and haunted, Alan Strang
(Peter Firth) – touched with terrible childhood memories (a mother’s
overzealous religious fervor at odds with his father’s atheism; an extension of
his ineffectual mastering of paternal love). These impediments uproot and promote
Alan’s emotional discord. Eventually, desire in its purest form is plucked from
Alan’s mind and bosom through a series of brutal regression therapies, only to
be firmly implanted within his liberator’s heart and soul.
Psychiatrist,
Martin Dysart (Richard Burton) is a burnt out shell of his former self, voyeuristically
plunging into Alan’s exalted abyss, searching for some greater epiphany. The
realization, that his own passion will likely remain discontented, comes too
late in Dysart’s life’s journey. He’s destined to remain anger and frustrated.
Indeed, for a man who has given so much to the cause of ‘restoring sanity’
Alan’s defiance is a bitter pill to swallow; much more than the phony ‘truth
serum’ Dysart administers to coax Alan’s confession to his motives for a very
brutal crime inflicted upon the innocent – or rather, innocence lost.
The probing
intellectualisms of Schaffer’s disturbing masterpiece are less successful on
film; perhaps because the dimensionality of the work itself is chronically
blunted by the two-dimensionality of the moving image. Equus is blessed by a unique assemblage of exceptionally fine
character actors, a towering central performance from Richard Burton; also with
Peter Schaffer’s peripatetic screenplay, embellished for the screen what the
stage could only suggest through transitional uses of light. But Sidney Lumet’s
more naturalistic approach to the material; ‘opening up’ the play, is quite unnecessary. Moreover, at times it
just seems awkward and untrue to its origins; the imposition of changing locales,
times of day and implied flashbacks becoming marginally theatrical, though
never evolving into something more than a sensualistic nightmare. Like Burton’s doomed psychiatric counsellor,
we are never in danger of losing our way. Sidney Lumet brings us to the brink
more than a handful of times, but stops just short of a grander liberation,
less subversive, though just as problematic as religious romanticism, never
entirely fulfilled.
On the
surface, Equus can seem just odd and
out of sorts, despite superb performances from Burton and co-star, Peter Firth;
the latter tenaciously erotic, yet Christ-like in his all too human suffrage;
punished by some majestic design beyond his control. Firth’s performance goes
beyond mere thoughtfulness for the subject material; delving into some deeply
tortured mysticism. The part could so easily have swung the other way – to
quirky ridicule or plain vanilla eccentricity run amuck. Instead, Firth manages
to extract a striking coherency from his lacerated martyrdom. The dynamic agony in his imploding ecstasy is
what sells Equus beyond vintage 70’s
art house cinema. Regrettably, the movie’s appeal is neither timeless nor
perhaps even lasting once the experience of seeing it is over; its memory
expunged from our consciousness, or worse, merely dismissed as just another
psycho-babble riddle unraveled to its inevitable conclusion – the anticipated
salvation of one man’s soul at the expense of another’s.
As a dream
freshly remembered, Equus opens with
a passionate first-person monologue, expertly delivered by Richard Burton (an
actor whose vocal presence alone could command a recitation of the telephone
book). Dr. Martin Dysart addresses the audience with a convolution of
perplexing images relayed in flashback. We see a sweaty naked man with wild
hair in half shadow, caressing the soft mane of his white steed; listening to
Burton’s near-hypnotic/mildly operatic exaltation of an ‘appetite’ shared by
rider and mount. Whatever element of seventies ‘kink’ is suggested herein (bestiality,
anyone?) is immediately dashed as the timber in Burton’s voice grows more
shrill: the subversive sensuality in these endless darkened recesses now
juxtaposed with a tight, little office becoming more well-lit by the moment, as
psychiatrist Martin Dysart expresses his chaotic contempt, miraculously
transgressing into an even more seditious admiration. The doctor has become
envious of his patient. Equus begins
on this shockingly vibrant note of persecuted voluptuousness. But it quickly
devolves into gloomy tedium; an atypically British drawing room comedy of
errors, its trappings as a psychological melodrama impeded by the rest of the
story’s rather pedestrian linear narrative.
Worse for the
movie is Sidney Lumet and cinematographer, Oswald Morris’ unified worship of
the stagecraft; bringing up the ‘houselights’ as it were; the camera slowly
dollying away from a close-up on Burton’s pock-skinned, careworn, frustrated
doctor, to reveal the squalid surroundings where he conducts his daily business
- curing troubled minds; or rather, anesthetizing them to accept the boredoms
of life from which not even he can escape. Lumet and Morris’ theatricality
grounds the visuals in a sort of moving tableau; never achieving the
mesmerizing abstract of Equus as
live performance; never pushing the artistic boundaries of our titular hero far
enough to truly martyr him to its cause.
We are introduced
to court magistrate, Hesther Saloman (Eileen Atkins) who barges into Martin’s office
at the psychiatric hospital. Saloman is adamant Dysart take up the cause of
analyzing and curing Alan Strang (Peter Firth); a boy accused of brutally
blinding six horses with a hoof pick at the stables where he once worked.
Surely, this is an act of madness; the perverse ravings of a lunatic more
dangerous to himself even than he is to society at large. But Dysart is
overburdened with hard cases. Why should Alan’s be any different? At first, the boy does not disappoint him on
this score; responding to any and all inquiries by singing famous commercial
jingles aloud and remaining generally despondent.
Alan forces
Dysart into a sort of quid pro quo analysis of his own bloodless and
emotionally starved life. Dysart confesses to a reoccurring dream: one
recasting him as a religious figure inhumanely murdering children. We catch
glimpses of Dysart and his wife, Margaret (Kate Reid), living all but apart in
their fashionable townhouse; the days blended into months of cohabitation
without any sort of affection or even communication transpiring between them.
Dysart is emotionally exhausted. Moreover, he harbors a deep-seeded
dissatisfaction with psychiatry as the ‘cure all’ for the human mind. Shaffer
and Lumet are rather hard on Freudian principles; our movie’s supposed
proponent of psychoanalysis – Dr. Dysart – questioning if any good can come of
it. What does he do for his adolescent patients anyway? Merely quell their fears
and teach them how to adjust to the mendacities of life. Yet, Dysart cannot
help but admire such extreme behaviors; their thrashing against the complacency
that surrounds and threatens to engulf, defying the erosion of that spark of desire
Dysart has long since sacrificed and is now incapable of stirring from within.
As far as
Dysart can see, Alan’s only crime is he has made a violent attempt to break
free from the chains of societal acceptance. Salomon, however, regards Alan’s
blinding of the stallions as an act in desperate need of Dysart’s brilliant
psychoanalytic skills; a last ditch effort to restore Alan’s sanity. And so,
the therapies begin. After Alan refuses to open up to Dysart’s prodding
questions, Dysart gives Alan a tape recorder. Perhaps what he cannot express in
his presence he will commit to taped reflections in the privacy of his own
room. In the meantime, Dysart pays a call on Alan’s parents; Dora (Joan
Plowright) and Frank (Colin Blakely). What he quickly uncovers is a
dysfunctional family unit, predicated on Frank’s submissive refusal to embrace
Dora’s religious piety. The walls in Alan’s attic bedroom are covered with
pasted images of religious iconography and a single framed portrait of a white
stallion. In time, Dysart learns the horse’s visage is a replacement for a
rather monstrous rendering of the crucifixion. Dysart is allowed to compare these
two images side by side; Christ’s chains correlated to the bit caught in the stallion’s
mouth; the eyes of both horse and the divine registering fear and agony.
Dora suffers a
breakdown in Dysart’s presence. Frank momentarily comforts her, but with great
reluctance. In flashback, we see the Strangs at the beach when Alan was a boy;
a stranger (John Wyman) on a black stallion approaching Alan, who is
preoccupied with building his sand castle. The stranger is generous, offering
to take Alan on a brisk jaunt on horseback. Alan willingly accepts. But the
race to the edge of the surf is alarming to Dora and Frank, who panic and
demand Alan’s immediate return; the boy’s moment of exhilaration suddenly
dashed to pieces as Frank yanks Alan from his mount, injuring his arm in the
process, but more importantly, embarrassing him in front of this rather robust
horseman; just the sort of male role model Alan would prefer.
Wyman (who
many will remember as the buff assassin in For
Your Eyes Only 1981) is dressed from head to toe in black to complement the
shadowy course hair of his mount, emphasizing Dora’s religious teachings to
Alan about the Pagans who – when first encountering men on horseback – believed
the rider and horse were one – a sort of modern day centaur. Alan’s
recollection also feeds into Dora’s fears about the devil; this tall and captivating
stranger made momentarily attractive to a young innocent who knows nothing of
wickedness but is nevertheless tempted by it. Besides, the ride Allan is taken
on is not a celebratory adventure as – say – The Black Stallion Rides Again – but a perilous sprint into the
gloomy surf, thwarted at the last possible moment by Dora’s frantic shrieks and
Frank’s over-protectiveness. Have Dora
and Frank been too quixotic in their parental responsibilities? Or have they
inadvertently witnessed the very moment when pure evil first began to penetrate
Alan’s heart?
Equus would have more to say about this struggle for a
young man’s soul if only the movie didn’t mangle its religious foreshadowing
with bouts of flawed masochism. We observe Frank watching while his son
clenches a homemade bridle of rope in his mouth, straddling his mattress and
using a coat hanger to thrash himself against the thigh; his imaginative
attempt to relive the experience of riding with wild abandonment for the first
time. Superficially, the moment represents Alan’s need to escape his parents’
provinciality, fraught with the most remedial comprehension of pubescence. Only
later, is this more unearthly and orgasmic desire fulfilled as Alan strips
naked to mount ‘Nugget’ – one of the horses in his employer’s stables. With
Dysart’s prodding – ‘getting off’ vicariously, as it were, on Alan’s crude and
very cruel regression therapy sessions – we witness the boy’s uninhibited sexual
arousal; feeling the course horsehair caught between his naked legs, Nugget’s
soft white mane cushioning his exposed and bouncing crotch; Alan’s screams of
elation echoing in Dysart’s eardrums.
Both patient
and doctor have reached an impassioned crossroads in their psychotherapy, never
again to be the same. From this moment of raw carnal frenzy, Equus unexpectedly devolves into a
run-of-the-mill psychoanalytic ‘who done
it?’ or rather ‘why did he do it?’
Dysart forces Alan to tell him about Jill Mason (Jenny Agutter); the equestrian
rider responsible for getting him the job as stable hand at Harry Dalton’s
(Harry Andrews) stud farm and riding stables.
Despite Alan’s initial lack of skills required to do the job, Dalton
takes him on without reservations. Jenny is flirtatious, encouraging Alan to
escort her to a ‘blue movie’ in the village. Alan relates this moment to Dysart
as ‘disgusting’ – the theater populated with only middle-aged men. The scene on
the screen is a gratuitous display of flesh as Alan’s father walks into the
theater, forcibly removing Alan from his seat in yet another moment of
puritanical humiliation for Alan with Jenny as his witness this time around.
But Alan is more relieved by the sudden realization his own father, strict and
forthright as he pretends to be, is nevertheless flawed and all too human; come
to the theater to quell his own appetites unsatisfied in his marriage.
Refusing to
return home with Frank, Alan instead escorts Jenny back to the stables. She seduces
him in the loft and he momentarily forgets himself – or rather, confuses his
desire for her with his devotion to Equus; his misperceived god reincarnated as
a horse. All this is told to Dysart in a flashback; Alan, boastful of how he
plunged his manhood into Jenny. The truth, however, is that at the very moment
where his own gratification might have been fulfilled, Alan instead becomes impotent
and quite unable to perform. Jenny is tender and understanding. But Alan is
beside himself; growing sullen and rude before being consumed by rage, ordering
Jenny from the stables and taking the hoof pick to ferociously blind the
stallions he believes are responsible for his failings as a man. It’s an
unsettlingly homoerotic moment, Alan’s voiceover revealing to us that his mind
could only see and think of ‘Him’ when attempting to make love to Jenny. This
moment of mutilation is witnessed by a shell-shocked Harry Dalton, who knocks
Alan to the ground – surrounded by his prized stallions writhing in pain, blood
streaming from their hollowed out eye sockets.
The
iconography of the crucifixion in this penultimate moment of revelation goes
well beyond crystalizing the point of the story for the audience. In fact, it
veers into that all too familiar, distorted cliché of demonic possession played
out in movies like The Exorcist
(1973) or The Omen (1976): the
eternal conflict between good and evil. As Alan shouts, “Mine!...I am yours and you are mine! The Lord thy God is a Jealous
God” we are presented with a moment more predictably lifted from the
miserable mélange of the B-grade 1970’s horror movie. Equus is Alan’s god and –
like Jesus – is wretchedly sacrificed. But is this the divine or the devil’s
hand at work? We are never entirely certain whose will is in command of Alan
from within.
In one of his
previous sessions, Alan has compared horses to Christ more directly; their
unquestioning benevolence and tireless servitude to man, only to be tortured
with the bit caught between their teeth. Alan’s mutilation of the stallions is
thus the movie’s counterpoint to the enslavement and torture Christ endured at
the hand of the Romans. But it is a flawed equivalent at best; much more
effectively fleshed out in Shaffer’s stagecraft with less bloodshed, eloquently
expressed through performance and more visceral and alarming lighting effects.
Arguably, the movie cannot get away with mere implications. However, Sidney
Lumet does revert to a not altogether successful lighting technique – the
stable suddenly bathed in a curious orange hue that vaguely reminds of those
heat lamps used to rewarm day-old hotdogs sold at the deli.
Movies exist on
‘show’ rather than ‘tell’. And yet, Shaffer’s wordy prose, however brilliantly
spoken by costars Richard Burton and Peter Firth, suffer from Lumet’s big
reveal - the grotesqueness in Alan’s sacrifice. The gutting of the horses’ eye
sockets, repeated over and over again in close-up (presumably with mannequins
and red dye number nine, although I must confess, it looked very real and
unappealing), is just horrendous rather than shocking; undercutting all good
taste. The transference of passion and/or evil from Alan’s painfully cleansed to
Dysart’s ever-blackening heart becomes the movie’s banal denouement. We know
Alan’s case has pushed Dysart over the edge. In point of fact, he didn’t have
far to go, considering the crippling ennui coagulating in Dysart’s mind,
already impugning his ability to be a good psychiatrist or even an average
human being.
Equus, thus, concludes on a dower note of staleness. And
yet, the movie cannot be considered a total loss. For one thing, Equus is one of the most articulately
scripted psychoanalytic/Biblical parables ever attempted for the movie screen.
Despite its dramatic flaws, it strives for some grander meaning and that is ‘grand’
all by itself. If the movie is not
entirely satisfying (and it’s not), the fault is more Sidney Lumet’s than Peter
Shaffer’s tweaking of his own material. Equus
on film shies from the perfection achieved on the stage. Yet, the performances
are uniformly top-notch and worthy of our renewed consideration. Richard Burton
remains a phenomenon for which no equal currently exists in our cinema
firmament.
Peter Firth is
bone-chillingly brilliant; utterly believable as a genuinely troubled and ‘almost’
lost soul. Joan Plowright exudes a captivatingly dainty ugliness as the wounded
matriarch, internalizing her son’s emotional breakdown as somehow more her humiliation
than his tragedy, despite the fact she cannot conceive her own complicity in
its making. Finally, there is Eileen Atkins’ – magnificent as the sole voice of
reason, dragging Burton’s ailing and erratic psychoanalyst back from the brink,
kicking and screaming. Equus may not
be a perfect. But it is potent, often disturbing, tenaciously original and unpleasantly
sincere; in short - it stirs the mind to contemplations. Too few movies do as
much.
Twilight
Time’s relatively new alliance with MGM (under the Fox Home Video banner) gives
us another reference quality 1080p transfer. In a word – flawless – full of attractively
reproduced colors, naturalistic flesh tones and overall outstanding tonality,
complimented with perfectly balanced film grain. In short, Equus on Blu-ray is everything one might expect or want it to
be. Oswald Morris’ outdoor
cinematography vividly pops while indoor scenes reveal Morris’ gift for mood lighting,
everything captured with razor-sharp crystal clarity. Minute details are revealed throughout; from
Alan’s tousled locks to Dysart’s murky tweeds. There are a few anomalies to
consider; marginal blips of dirt and a moment or two of built-in flicker…also a
curious warp and wobble of the entire image around the 16 min. mark: a minor
quibbling at best. Equus’ lossless
DTS-HD mono mix is remarkably aggressive with superb fidelity. Richard Rodney
Bennett’s minimalist score is potent.
Extras? Wow!
Twilight Time gives us ‘In from the Cold?: The World of Richard Burton’.
At just over 2 hours this impressively mounted 1988 documentary by Tony Palmer
is a treasure unto itself (archival interviews with Burton and laudatory
comments made by his friends and fellow actors), richly satisfying in its
content if not in its overall visual presentation. It is in HD. But the
surviving elements are in fairly rough shape. Nevertheless, this is a most welcomed
surprise. We also get a superb audio commentary from TT’s Nick Redman and Julie
Kirgo; the latter once again providing us with some stellar insight in her
liner notes to augment our appreciation of this movie. Bottom line: highly
recommended!
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3
VIDEO/AUDIO
5
EXTRAS
4
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