UNDER FIRE: Blu-ray (Orion Pictures 1983) Twilight Time
“I like you people – but you are sentimental shits.
You fall in love with the poets. The poets fall in love with the Marxists. The
Marxists fall in love with themselves. The country falls in love with the
rhetoric, and in the end we are stuck with tyrants.. In twenty years, we will
know who’s right!”
- Jean-Louis Trintignant as Marcel
Jazy
Hollywood’s
commitment to political activism arguably reached its pinnacle of probative
research and introspection during the 1980’s. It seemed everybody was making a
statement on celluloid back then; directors, Richard Attenborough, bookending
the decade with Gandhi (1982) and Cry Freedom (1987), Roland Joffé -The Killing Fields (1984) and Oliver
Stone, mounting Salvador (1986).
1983’s representative to the cause was Roger Spottiswoode’s Under Fire; using the backdrop of the
Nicaraguan Revolution and America’s flawed backing, (then withdrawal) by the
Carter Administration, meant to prop up the despotic regime of Anastasio
Somoza. Some of this political intrigue remains intact in Clayton Frohman and Ron
Shelton’s screenplay. But you have to look for it – or rather, must possess at
least a smattering of U.S. foreign policy in Latin America, and, have an even
better grasp on the arc of historical perspective, regarding this muddied
unrest, begun with the founding of the Sandinista National Liberation Front in
1969, named for Augusto César Sandino, a freedom fighter in 1930, who resisted
the U.S. occupation of his country even then.
Flash forward
to a different era – or now, with the passage of 31 years since the movie’s
debut, to…well; to paraphrase Rodgers & Hammerstein, “let’s start at the very beginning; a very good place to start.” Alas, to quote another famous lyric from ‘As
Time Goes By’ – “It’s still the
same old story…a fight for love and glory…a case of do or die.” If the
reference to 1942’s Casablanca seems
off, it’s only because Spottiswoode’s Under
Fire is a markedly less glamorous affair; the gritty Oaxaca and Chiapas,
Mexico locations convincingly standing in for the Nicaraguan landscape. But
what’s here is basically still a lover’s triangle; this one between noble radio
journalist and single mother, Claire (Joanna Cassidy) torn between her on
again/off again bloodless relationship with burgeoning TV news anchorman, Alex
Grazier (Gene Hackman), and the promise of something more challenging and
decidedly, much more volatile with his best friend, prize-winning photojournalist,
Russell Price (Nick Nolte).
Price sees life
more clearly through his lens. In fact, our first impressions of Claire are
through the eye of his camera, capturing the essential unease, disappointment
and regret she’s secretly suffering at a party given in Alex’s honor. What is
superficially a celebratory moment is actually the end of their affair. The
camera doesn’t lie? Well, not intentionally. But a picture is only as truthful
as the thousand or so words printed to accompany it; a theory later tested when
Nolte’s hotshot photog is asked to ‘stage’ a portrait of the fictional fallen
hero, Raphael (Jorge Zepeda); dressing the deceased’s bullet-riddled body in
combat fatigues and posing it between a pair of hardcore revolutionaries. The
photo is meant to keep dwindling hope alive in the cause; also, to upset the
Carter Administration’s current backing of President Somoza and undermine El
Presidente’s press conference, even as Somoza’s sources have rightfully
confirmed Raphael death. It’s a decision the forthright, usually fair and
balanced Price will later live to regret.
But for the
moment, Price is too involved in the impassioned furor of the struggle; too
mixed up in his own head where his loyalties lay and much too distracted by the
mutual seduction of his best friend’s girl and the emotional fallout it will
rain down on all their lives. In the third act, none of the aforementioned participants
is particularly thinking clearing; Claire, too desperate to survive the
implosion of her personal life after Alex is killed and Price, momentarily left
MIA, hunted by the reactionary militia, seeking refuge in the war-torn hovels. Claire’s
life is already a mess without Price’s help or complicity; reneging on her
responsibilities as the mother of a teenager, left in the care of her own
mother back home, capable only of administering superficial advice by telephone
to her offspring about the cleavage-revealing frock she’s worn to the prom (She
should talk! Claire’s practically falling out of the red little number she
wears to Alex’s party and later to the Viking Nightclub – a local watering hole
populated by the foreign press and local politicos, soon to be bombed by the
revolutionaries.)
The
Frohman/Shelton screenplay does a fairly capable job of balancing the
particulars of this complicated love affair with the more urgent political
upheaval threatening to intrude. And Nolte, Hackman and Cassidy are giving
career-making performances; fueled with a sustained level of glib, though
thoroughly biting intensity. When Cassidy’s Claire eventually reunites with
Nolte’s thoroughly deflated Price in his hotel room, and this after nervously
suspecting she might never see him again, there is a genuine release and shared
relief between these two that seems to validate and confirm the immediacy of
the movie’s political message. All history is relative to the moment in which
it occurs, but quickly fades into the annals of a history itself; buried in a textbook
soon to be out of date and – even more alarmingly – out of print.
Our story
begins with the breakup of Claire and Alex. He’s unwilling to concede defeat
just yet, but eager to return to the U.S. where he’s being courted by a major
TV network to become their anchorman. It’s an uneasy fit at best, Alex much
more comfortable as a war correspondent, traveling from place to place; wherever
the spirit moves and political climate is in a state of perpetual civil unrest.
At present, it’s Chad, where the laid-back Price encounters goon/wannabe
mercenary, Oates (Ed Harris). Here is a fellow so misguided in his thuggish
thirst to fire a gun he winds up on a rebel convoy he’s mistaken for government
soldiers. How uninformed can a guy get?
Alas, Price is about to find out; arriving fashionably late at a going away
party being given for Alex in the lobby of the hotel. Only moments before,
Claire has been forthright in suggesting their love affair – such as it is –
has come to a quiet end.
Price’s camera
catches an unguarded glimpse of Claire’s sadness unobserved by the rest of the
revelers; the two skulking off to a makeshift dark room where she confirms the
breakup, much to Price’s amusement. He casually inquires whose fault it is ‘this time’; Claire’s honest response (she
is to blame) sparking a mutual interest predicated on more than friendship. Not
long thereafter, this trio winds up in Central America. While blowing off some
steam, Alex, Price and Claire experience a coup d'etat orchestrated by militant
revolutionaries who take hostages inside a local nightclub and inadvertently
detonate a small grenade in the lounge. Shortly thereafter, Price is detained
inside a prison, released and given back his passport only if he signs a waver
claiming he was not arrested and his life was never threatened. In the
meantime, Alex implores his Time Magazine editor to pick up his cover story
about the bombing. Regrettably, the magazine is far more interested in covering
another of the Pope’s benign goodwill tours; Alex, begrudgingly attempting to
explain, “We’re backing a fascist
government again. Look up Nicaragua. You drive to New Orleans and turn left.”
The despicable
involvement of the U.S. is further hammered home by the appearance of Hubbell
Kittle (Richard Masur); an insidious political animal attempting damage control
from all sides. “There’s fascist and then
there’s fascist,” he urges Alex to reconsider. Not long afterward, Alex’s
decision to change careers midstream and become a TV news anchorman, leaves
Price and Claire to go it alone, encountering the unprincipled Marcel Jazy (Jean-Louis
Trintignant) for a formal introduction and interview with Somoza. Jazy openly
admits he’s been schmoozing and fleecing both Somoza and the C.I.A. to satisfy his
own cosmopolitan urges; ballsy enough even to be sleeping with Somoza’s
supermodel girlfriend, Miss Panama (Jenny Gago); undoubtedly the kiss of death –
or, at the very least a homemade castration – if ever their flagrante delicto
is discovered. Alas, Somoza has bigger
problems on his itinerary; chiefly Raphael’s most recent insurgency; the
grassroots revival of the people’s war against its own government gaining
stature and ground, much to Somoza’s chagrin. Superficially, Somoza presents a
good front; charming and evasive. Behind the scenes, he’s already plotting his
own evacuation in the event of a palace coup, even going so far as to dig up
the remains of his parents for a speedy getaway.
Price grows
increasingly appalled by the U.S.’s backing of this corrupt regime. He sets out
to contact, photograph and interview Raphael; a veritable ghost whose
whereabouts are unknown. Claire joins Price on this mission, the two introduced
to Pedro (Eloy Phil Casados), one of the revolution’s leaders, unfortunately
gunned down right before their eyes by Oates, who has survived a bell tower
assault and bombing. Price knows Oates killed Pedro but remains silent, the
first of two complicities in the film where his conscience and courage fail
him. Eventually, Price and Claire are taken high into the mountains, to a retreat
where it is revealed Raphael has already died; Price encouraged to fake a photo
as though Raphael were still alive, thus giving a whole new – and unintentional
– meaning to the oft’ quoted Hiram Johnson; “that
the first casualty of war is truth.” Against his better judgment, Price
agrees to this charade, causing Alex – now a bona fide television news anchor -
to return to Nicaragua for a much-coveted interview.
Regrettably,
he and Price become lost while driving down the militarized streets; Price
witnessing Alex’s execution at the hands of Somoza’s military and pursued down
tight back alleys on foot; narrowly escaping capture or, presumably, death. The
roll of film he shot of Alex’s execution is hidden in the folds of a white flag
Claire manages to smuggle out of the country; the images of Alex’s murder going
viral and forcing the U.S. withdrawal of all funds to Somoza’s government,
thereby hastening its collapse. In the waning hours of impending victory,
Marcel is gunned down by a pair of inexperienced mercenaries. As Claire grieves
for Alex’s loss at a makeshift hospital, she is rather cruelly informed by one
of the attending nurses just how many civilian casualties it took to liberate
the nation. “Maybe we should have killed
an American journalist fifty years ago,” the woman reasons.
The end of Under Fire is a tad too optimistic and
clever for the rest of the picture; Price fluffing off Oates’ inquiry whether
he’ll be exposed for his complicity in Pedro’s murder; Price glibly adding, “See you in Thailand.” Earlier, Hubbell
attempted to knock some common sense into Price’s head with “Listen, Russell. Let's grow up, huh? It's
easy to fall in love with the underdog. But there's an upside and a downside to
this thing” – a prophetic statement considering the film stops just short
of what actually occurred in Nicaragua after the people’s victory celebration
as depicted in the epilogue; the replacement of Jimmy Carter with Ronald Reagan
signaling an even more aggressive push to topple the left-wing Sandinistas by ensconcing
a decidedly right-wing Contra government in its stead.
Under Fire is undeniably intelligently made, capturing the
immediacy of its danger-riddled back streets and byways, strewn in mortar shell
fallout and decaying human debris. Too few war-torn/pseudo-political romance
movies achieve this tenuous and effective balance director, Roger
Spottiswoode seems effortlessly to display from start to finish. Alex’s
assassination was actually based on the brutal execution of war correspondent/journalist
Bill Stewart, callously gunned down by one of Somoza’s guards, the entire
incident captured on video and circulated around the world. In lesser hands,
the event and the movie might have become too theatrical/too action oriented to
be believed and minus the heart and soul necessary to make the former resonate
with genuineness. But Under Fire has
been expertly cast, and even more astutely played by its three principles. Here
are characters that never ‘feel’ like
Hollywood stars doing their usual pretend. Even more miraculous, the Frohman/Shelton
screenplay doesn’t fall into the usual clichés where love and war are
concerned. There’s no love/hate parable at work. Cassidy’s Claire merely falls
out of love with one man and into love with another. It’s not her fault and no
one, least of all, Hackman’s Alex, cares enough to ascribe blame to this
unexpected change of heart. Under the best of circumstances, life is imperfect.
In war, it becomes positively unpredictable and trivialities, like the sway of
the human heart, must take the proverbial backseat to more pressing realities.
Nothing about Under Fire seems manufactured. John
Alcott’s no frills cinematography and Jerry Goldsmith’s pan flute and percussionist-inspired
score add to the verisimilitude in meaningful ways that augment and inform. Part
of movie’s documentarian quality is also owed to the seemingly casual nature of
its central performances. There’s not a false note among them and all are
ferociously empathetic. The screenplay, as well as the actors, gets to examine
the consciences of these morally ambiguous outsiders. With this investment,
there develops the struggle for impartiality befitting the canon of ethics in
their chosen profession. Nicaragua is not a headline, but a real place with real people dying for their freedom. Spottiswoode’s
focus is rightfully situated upon these moments of realization and in creating
the right atmosphere to trump a mechanically forward-moving plot. As such, he illustrates the finer, less
perceivable, and even less often exposed complexities of a badly muddled war in
which the more personalized ‘moral
compass’ of its protagonists is not only repeatedly tested under the strain
of assault and murder, but increasingly becomes far more difficult to define.
Twilight Time’s
Blu-ray is culled from the Orion Pictures catalog, now under MGM/Fox Home Video’s
control. The image harvest is mostly impressive but not without its flaws. We
have some age-related dirt, scratches and one instance of color streaking occurring
right around the 23 min. mark. Frequently, clarity is less than razor-sharp;
fine detail being lost in nondescript background details. Close-ups look very
nice, but long shots are slightly out of focus or, at least, lacking the
necessary and anticipated visual refinement. Flesh tones are on the orange
side; not out of the realm of possibility for actors who are supposed to be
slogging it in the sweaty and sunburnt regions of the world, and therefore
would have become ruddier in their complexions. Contrast seems adequate, if not
exceptional. There appears to be no untoward digital tinkering applied to the
image and grain is consistently rendered. Overall, this transfer is organic and
pleasing, particularly during the second half of the film.
The DTS 2.0
audio offers a fairly solid integration of dialogue, effects and Jerry
Goldsmith's Oscar-nominated score. Extras actually look more plentiful than
they are. We get two independent audio commentaries, each informative in their
own way; the one featuring Spottiswoode preferred. TT also gives us their usual
commitment to an isolate score – alas, this time infrequently interrupted by
SFX. There’s also Joanna Cassidy Remembers; billed as a featurette, when it’s
little more than a handful of sound bites from Cassidy, truncated together and
clumsily cut short. There’s also a photo archive and theatrical trailer. Bottom
line: recommended.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5
EXTRAS
3
Comments