SALVADOR: Blu-ray re-issue (Hemdale, 1986) Sandpiper Picture
Oliver Stone’s movie career has
been the stuff of controversy…and Stone wouldn’t have it any other way. Whether
critiquing the emasculating neuroses of shell-shocked veterans or tackling
volatile conspiracy theories surrounding the obscene cover-up of the
assassination of the president, Stone’s ‘nothing ventured/nothing gained’
attitude, coupled with a telescopically focused belief in his own opinions,
and, his keen film maker’s eye laying bare the hypocrisies of our time, has
yielded a veritable treasure trove of cinéma vérité. A self-professed ‘wild man’, Stone has been
oft’ misjudged - and harshly – for his maverick ways. Critics have ranged in
their appraisal of his film making prowess from exaltation to indifference to
open hostility. Audiences, however, regard him as one of the leading
clairvoyants in our postmodern age; bucking trends, probing history and putting
forth alternative perspectives that engage, as well as enlighten. There is an
edginess to Stone’s art. Passionate, clear-eyed and possessing an innate mistrust
– nee contempt for authority – especially, toward injustices perpetuated for
political gain – Oliver Stone has, at times, been the lone voice for the
social, moral and constitutional redemption of the United States.
Salvador (1986) remains
Oliver Stone’s mislaid gem, channeling the director’s penchant for politically
charged in-your-face drama set against a broader canvas of civil unrest. In
some ways, Stone’s métier is not unlike that of the immortal David Lean; albeit,
with a darker, grittier edge. All but ignored upon its release, snubbed at the
Oscars (3 nominations but no wins) and virtually eclipsed in the public’s
estimation by Stone’s other monumental contribution of the year – Platoon
(1986), Salvador’s reputation, like its’ director’s, has only ripened
with age. The film is, in fact, a powerful indictment on the crisis in El
Salvador and America’s financial involvement that helped to perpetuate a
despicable high command, responsible for the murder of nearly 75,000
civilians. The Stone/Boyle screenplay
begs a burning question: how can a country survive when the proponents for
legitimate peace are allowed to be dismantled in favor of a puppet regime
funded by America? Salvador had an inauspicious beginning; Stone
casually bumping into renegade photojournalist, Richard Boyle and discovering
an oil-stained manuscript kicking about the backseat of his rather filthy car.
Inquiring as to its contents, Stone was informed by Boyle he had written down
stories of his time in El Salvador; his recollections of the people and bloody
civil war sparking Stone’s imagination. Boyle assured Stone no one was
interested in the manuscript. After all, he had shopped it around to various
publishers but to no avail. Stone, arguably, a sucker for the underdog was
immediately intrigued. By 1985, Boyle was regarded as something of a ‘has
been’; his methods for covering a story too ‘out there’ for any legitimate
media service to put him on their payroll. What Boyle had, in fact, written was
the brutal rape and murder of humanitarian worker Jean Donovan and three nuns;
names changed in the movie to Cathy Moore (Cindy Gibbs) and Sisters Stan (Dana
Hansen), Burkit (Sigridur Gudmunds) and Wagner (Erica Carlson) at the hands of
the Juntas; also, about America’s involvement in propping up of a known corrupt
administration with financial support, for no other reason than because they
were not communists; thus, considered the ‘lesser’ of two evils.
Moving Richard Boyle into his guest
house, Oliver Stone hammered out a manageable screenplay in three weeks,
shopping the property around with little success. Undaunted, Stone prepared to
throw in his own capital behind the project; Hemdale Entertainment signing on
to produce and distribute the film. For authenticity, Stone pursued Robert E.
White, the former U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador from 1979-81; the years
Salvador – the movie – takes place. However, perusing an early draft of the
screenplay, White was appalled by its blend of crude comedy and ultra-violence
which he found irrelevant and strangely perverse. Opting out necessitate a name
change; Stone further muddying the waters by making his rechristened Ambassador
Thomas Kelly (Michael Murphy) the ineffectual fop of the piece.
Stone’s initial plan had been to
shoot Salvador with Richard Boyle playing himself, the entire production
set in its authentic locale; Stone, bribing the regime with a phony screenplay
in which the Juntas were represented in as the people’s salvation; Stone
believing wholeheartedly the ploy would result in a loan out of military
equipment and forces at no further expense to the production, thus giving it a
big budget look. In the preliminary stages, Stone also attempted to coax his
star, James Woods to fly into El Salvador with Richard Boyle as his tour guide.
The two men, however, had met earlier at a house party in Los Angeles where
Woods took an instant dislike to Boyle. Furthermore, Woods was a severe
germaphobe; the prospect of suffering a tour of this third world nation under
less than hygienic conditions immediately souring him on the prospect. The last straw for Woods was rather
portentous of things to come. Salvador’s technical adviser was shot at
point blank range by rebels while on a tennis court. After that, Woods understandably
refused to go anywhere near the front lines for the sake of his art. There are
really only two ways to regard Stone’s fervent – if misguided – hope to shoot Salvador
within the country’s war-ravaged borders; either as brave, renegade film-making
of the highest order, or an utterly idiotic daydream of a ‘wild man’ clearly
unable – or at least, unwilling - to factor in the real-life perils he would be
subjecting his cast and crew, merely to follow his dream project down the
proverbial rabbit hole to its inevitable conclusion
Eventually, Stone and his crew
settled on Mexico as a viable alternative. Even then, Salvador proved
anything but a pleasant shoot. Extras lying on a hillside, pretending to be
corpses, were left to wilt in the stifling 110-degree heat and humidity for
hours. James Woods inadvertently knocked a fair size rock loose from a pile of
debris. It rolled down a hill and struck an extra in the head. Also, Stone
frequently came in conflict with the female agent overseeing the production on
behalf of Mexico’s Censorship Board, chastised for his fairly abysmal portrait
of this Latin American dystopia, riddled in gunfire and strewn for miles with
rural blight, married to the filth of human waste. Meanwhile, in Hollywood
Stone and his pet project were cumulatively being viewed as a firebrand;
unfavorably laying blame for the horrific atrocities squarely at the feet of
Ronald Reagan’s administration. Alas, those expecting a textbook example of how
it all came to pass in the real El Salvador – under the tyrannical reign of
Roberto d’Aubuisson (rechristened Major Maximiliano ‘Max’ Casanova and played
with atypical severity and aplomb by Tony Plana) – would be wise to reconsider
a few points. For Salvador would remain a tale of extremes, viewed through
the photo lens and eyes of a pair of burned-out grotesques; photojournalist,
Richard Boyle (James Woods) and reformed disc jockey, Dr. Rock (James Belushi).
As such, the nuggets of wisdom and
kernels of fact to be mined from Salvador became more impressionistic,
Stone giving us the Cole’s Notes version of this country’s socio-economic
implosion, but (and it’s a big ‘but’) with his own liberalized slant. At times,
this tended to eclipse reality with only the vaguest hint of verisimilitude.
Yet, like Stone’s greatest works, Salvador is exceptionally clever at
mixing up the two. Cast a crew would find no solace; the manufactured chaos
paling in comparison to the animosities mounting behind the scenes. James Woods
became antagonistic towards Jim Belushi; his contempt for Richard Boyle having
already fermented into rank disgust. Woods was clearly unhappy with the working
condition. But he had little – if any – respect for Boyle and only marginally
tolerated Belushi, who frequently tried to lighten the mood by cracking jokes.
On film, this antagonism bodes well for the strained ‘friendship’ between Boyle
and Rock. Behind the scenes it was a lethal concoction elevating everyone’s
blood pressure – if ambition, to get the damn thing finished on time and under
budget.
At one point, Woods dramatically
announced he was through with Belushi, Stone and the film, throwing down his
gear and marching off the set in the direction of the U.S. border. Mercifully, Stone
chased after his star in a jeep three miles up a back road to plead for his
return to finish the job. At the same time, the Mexican censors were ordering
Stone to remove half of his ‘set decoration’ garbage to tone down his
representation of the deplorable living conditions which they believed cast a
negative light on their potential tourist trade. Conscious of the fact his $2
million budget could be stretched only so far, Stone begrudgingly complied with
this latter request, mostly to get the censors off his back. Eventually, the
breakneck pace of production and Stone’s meticulous attention to every last
detail, coupled with his added daily responsibilities of playing ringmaster to
these warring temperaments, wore Stone down. By his own admission, he wrapped
production on Salvador emotionally and physically depleted - even desperate
to simply get the footage in the can and state’s side for the editing process
to begin. This too proved something of a challenge; Mexico withholding the film
negative until they believed proper compensation had been paid. “It was a
nightmare’s nightmare,” James Woods would later remark while shaking his
head.
Our story begins in Richard Boyle’s
seedy San Franciscan apartment; Richard - lazy, half asleep (or perhaps
sleeping off a hangover), leaving his wife (María Rubell) to grapple with a
disgruntled landlord demanding overdue rent money. Oliver Stone goes to great
lengths to setup our first impressions of Boyle as a genuinely unsympathetic,
emotionally cut off and fairly ridiculous screw up. His residence and his car
are variations on a sty; his attempted con of a female police officer after
he’s caught speeding with a suspended license, segueing into our first
introduction of Boyle’s best friend, Doctor Rock; an over-the-hill disc jockey
who hasn’t quite outgrown his penchant for late night carousing. Boyle attempts to find a media outlet that
will fund his expedition to El Salvador to cover the war. He is unsuccessful in
this pursuit, but elects to go down to South America anyway, taking Rock along
for the ride, and using his connections to be reunited with corrupt politico,
Colonel Julio Figueroa (Jorge Luke).
Aside: in the original cut of Salvador,
Figueroa treats the boys to some ‘hand’ and ‘blow’ jobs courtesy of his small
harem; Boyle – ever the wily diplomatist – finagling some invaluable
information from his old contact while having his ego stroked (other appendages
optional). In the final version we cut to Boyle’s chance meeting with
photojournalist, John Cassady (John Savage); competing cohorts from their old
skirmishes in Cambodia; swapping drinks between shots or shots between
drinks…whichever way they choose to sentimentally recall the atrocities their
eyes have seen. More too are in store for the pair at El Playon - a vacant
hillside where the death squads continue to dump their rotting carrion for the
vultures to pick apart. The Stone/Boyle screenplay trips around, clumsily in
fact; and next to San Salvador’s main cathedral where humanitarian worker,
Ramone Alvarez (Salvador Sánchez) is attempting to help loved ones identify
their missing relatives from mug shots taken after their assassinations. Boyle
is seemingly disinterested in their suffering; using the opportunity to tag
along with the guerillas who are preparing for their counterattack high in the
mountains.
Boyle’s failed attempts to broker
favor with the U.S. military overseen by Jack Morgan (Colby Chester), a
cardigan-wearing yuppie pinup analyst for a U.S. State Department, and Colonel
Bentley Hyde Sr. (Will McMillan), leads to a tenuous détente. Boyle is, after
all, a loose cannon; willing to cajole and/or insult to make his point. He
carpet hauls pinup reporter, Pauline Axelrod (Valerie Wildman) as a ‘Park Ave.
glamor-puss/blowjob queen’ who’s ‘kissed all the right asses’ to advance her
career as a media darling when, in fact, she’s not much of a reporter and isn’t
really interested in cracking a nail to get beyond the spin put out by the U.S.
State Department. As sweet revenge, Rock
spikes her champagne cocktail with acid; Axelrod, looking haggard, yet spun,
flubbing her lines during a TV broadcast a little later on.
Realizing the severity of the
situation, Boyle plans to get his girlfriend, Maria (the luminous, Elpedia
Carrillo) and her children, including a younger brother named Carlos (Martín
Fuentes) out of El Salvador. At the same time, he meets up with humanitarian
case worker, Cathy Moore and the good sisters, Stan, Burkit and Wagner. Boyle
is flirtatious with Cathy, who doesn’t really take him seriously. Cathy is, in
fact, a valued contact to Ambassador Kelly and later also becomes something of
a point person for Boyle to make his impassioned plea for a passport to get
Maria and her family out of El Salvador. Boyle is even ready to marry Maria to
make the extradition legal. Alas, she refuses his generosity, partly because
she will not be a martyr, but also because she truly loves Boyle with all her
heart. A rift develops in their relationship when Carlos and Rock are busted as
subversives for possession of marijuana; Boyle bribing the authorities with a
gold watch and TV. They let Rock leave. But Carlos is never heard from again;
his badly beaten body later discovered. In the meantime, Maria convinces Boyle
to see Archbishop Romero (José Carlos Ruiz); a passionate cleric who sincerely
preaches for peace and has been marked for assassination by Major Maximiliano.
Romero is publicly gunned down in a cathedral packed with parishioners; Max
appearing before the press a short while later, supposedly to denounce the
mysterious assassin and violence against the church. To quell the public
outrage, Max has Alvarez arrested for the murder; earmarked as a communist
sympathizer and sentenced to death.
Boyle appeals to Hyde and Morgan to
put an end to the fighting by convincing Ambassador Kelly to pull out all
military aid from the ruthless winning side. Boyle’s wish will be granted – not
by any noble intervention, but by a heinous act that incites the international
media to take notice. While on a routine trip to the airport, Cathy and the
sisters are run off the road by Max’s death squad. They are violently raped at
gunpoint before being shot execution-style and buried in unmarked shallow
graves. While Pauline puts a spin on the story; that the nuns perhaps ran a
roadblock and were mistaken as rebels, Ambassador Kelly knows better, warning
Hyde that as of this moment all U.S. aid is being suspended indefinitely. As
Maria prepares to pack and evacuate her home, presumably for the mountains,
Boyle is called away by Cassady on an errand to cover the guerillas’ invasion
of a nearby town. The guerillas are few in number – roughly 4000 strong – but
hearty in spirit. Despite their crippling losses, they take over the military
stronghold, assassinating their oppressors at gunpoint, including Max’s army
lieutenant (Juan Fernández). Pushed by Hyde and Morgan into reconsidering his
suspension of aid, Ambassador Kelly, who is being forced into a resignation by
the U.S. government, effectively signs the death warrants for a good many
rebels. Tanks, planes and helicopters run buckshot over the ill-equipped
guerillas. In attempting to cover the story, Cassady is shot in the throat,
handing over his film rolls to Boyle before dying in his arms.
Boyle tries to smuggle the
undeveloped canisters out of the country in his boot; Rock having paid for
forgeries of passports for Boyle, Maria and her children. Alas, the ruse is
discovered by the Junta border patrol, who beat and torture Boyle, threatening
to castrate him. Rock gets to a telephone and demands Ambassador Kelly
intervene. At the last possible moment he does, and Boyle, Maria and her
children are allowed safe passage into the U.S. They slip past customs
undetected. It all seems like smooth sailing, until a routine border security
check stops the couple’s bus as it crosses state lines into California. Boyle
is powerless to prevent the inevitable; Maria and the children are taken away
as illegals while Boyle is arrested for resisting arrest. In the movie’s
epilogue we learn Maria was deported, but rumored to have survived and escaped
to Guatemala.
Almost from beginning to end, Salvador
grips the viewer with its bittersweet irony: that virtually most – if not all –
of the bloodshed in this war-ravaged territory is needless and could have been
avoided without America’s meddling intervention on the wrong side. At one
point, Richard Boyle confronts Colonel Hyde on this very bone of contention,
Hyde attacking Boyle’s point of view as communist backtalk. “You know…” Hyde informs Boyle, “…if
you were in Vietnam, you’d be working in a reeducation camp pulling turnips.”
In what is probably the best moment of electrically charged dialogue in the
film, Boyle comes back with “I never really like turnips very much, Colonel.
And you don't see me applying for Vietnamese citizenship, do you? Is that why
you're here, Colonel? Some kind of post-Vietnam experience? Like you need a
rerun or something? You pour a hundred twenty million bucks into this place.
You turn it into a military zone, so what?
So you can have chopper parades in the sky? You let them close down the
universities. You let them wipe out the best minds in the countries. You let
them kill whoever they want. You let them wipe out the Catholic Church. You let
them do it all because they aren't Commies! And that, Colonel, is bullshit!”
What Boyle doesn’t get, of course,
is that it’s open season on the press in El Salvador - particularly such loose
cannons as he, who have zero cache with their own diplomatic corps and are
equally disdained by the rogue government in charge. What saves Boyle in the
end is not his conman’s shell game; not his ability to clear-cut a path of
logic through this convoluted military operation; nor even his own wits,
diluted by a chronic addiction to TickTack – the country’s 100 proof alcoholic
beverage - cheap and lethal in its ability to pickle the human mind. No, Boyle
is brought back from the brink by the one faction he might never have guessed
would stick its neck out for his safety, outgoing Ambassador Kelly as his final
act of amnesty, also by Rock, a man Boyle – and the screenplay initially treat
as his inferior; lacking intelligence and a genuine purpose in life. Nevertheless, it is Rock who gets his act
together midway through Salvador (something Boyle never manages to do), and
steps into a position of ‘take charge’ authority. Phoning in his favor to the
American Embassy in the eleventh hour ultimately saves Boyle’s life. Boyle? He
remains a screw-up; a social outcast, incapable of existing without a crisis to
buoy him, even in such gruesomely inhospitable conditions. The irony is that
while Maria dreams of a better life in America, Boyle lives more honestly when
he places himself at the edge of his own darkest daydream of a destiny – Maria,
Rock and Cassady be damned. The aspiration to be the sort of photojournalist he
can admire; the kind John Cassady already was and might have gone on to be, is
just a diversion for Boyle; a crutch to convince himself he isn’t as morally
bankrupt as he actually is and forever likely to remain. In Cassady’s absence
Boyle greedily elects to smuggle out his last rolls of film. But would Boyle have been honest about where
this footage came from? Hmmmmm. His failure to accomplish even this smallest
promise prevents us from ever knowing the real truth about Richard Boyle. It
also earmarks him as a pathetic excuse; not only as a journalist, but also as a
human being; exactly the sort deservedly laughed off by Cathy and vehemently
abhorred by Pauline Axelrod.
And yet, James Woods gives us a
disquieting quality of confused nobility in his characterization; not easily
earmarked as humanity, integrity, bravery or even professionalism. Woods’ Oscar-nominated performance is, in
fact, Oscar worthy because he slices through these complexities, examining
Boyle’s tumult from within, while allowing the audience to see this struggle
brewing. Here is a guy who really doesn’t know – or even ‘want to know’ how to
be a better human being. He just hopes to get by. But he also wants to be great
at it – a con’s con. Defining greatness within such a mediocre pursuit is as
difficult as peeling a turtle. Boyle’s skin, though seemingly thick at the
outset, is actually much more transparent and brittle once Woods’ gives us this
varied portrait of a despicable rogue who doesn’t even see the validity in
legitimately seeking redemption for his own personality.
Salvador gets reissued on
Blu-ray via Sandpiper Pictures. The original hi-def release was an early Twilight
Time disc. It’s unclear whether Disney, now the custodians of the Fox/MGM
library, are licensing this out. What is clear is that virtually no upgrades
have been made to the very dated video master previously supplied to TT, and
virtually identical on this outing. Very flawed, especially the last reel where
the image becomes inexplicable soft with amplified and very unnatural appearing
grain. The scene where Boyle and Maria fake their way through customs in the
U.S. is marred by an unhealthy purplish/green tint and haloing, also looking very
out of focus. Overall, color saturation is anemic at best - flesh tones
wavering between fairly accurate to piggy pink. Contrast is milky. But there
are some impressive fine details to be had, particularly in close-ups. Fair enough, Oliver Stone shot Salvador
on a shoestring. Gilbert Taylor’s cinematography was always meant to evoke a
pseudo-documentarian feel. But the picture still looks marginally washed out,
with a few scattered age-related artifacts sporadically popping up. We’re given
two only the 5.1 DTS remaster, not the original mono mix here, which had overall
better fidelity. Gone – virtually all of the extra content that was included on
the TT release - a 2.0 DTS isolated score, Oliver Stone’s astute observations in an audio
commentary – ported over from the old MGM DVD, Into the Valley of Death: The
Making of Salvador - an hour-long chronicle on the making of the
film, featuring some fairly astute observations from Stone, Richard Boyle, U.S.
Ambassador Robert E. White, James Woods and James Belushi and a full half hour
of deleted/extended scenes. Only the original theatrical trailer survives this
release. Bottom line: Salvador is a picture to have justly grown in its
reputation over the years. This reissue is a wan ghost flower of the old TT release.
If you own that, there is no good reason to buy this disc! Regrets.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
3
EXTRAS
0
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