___________________________________
Viggo
Mortensen is not about the words. He's about being
present.
The fortysomething actor creditably invests the creative capital he's
amassed from being Peter Jackson's weathered heartthrob of a
King in the billion-dollar-plus-grossing Rings trilogy. Hidalgo
is rousing, uncomplicated entertainment. There are layers of history
and subtext under its horse opera saddle, and while this is not quite
David Lean material, but there's hardly a thing wrong with this
"Aragorn of Arabia" action-adventure.
Mortensen's an actor
I'm content just to watch: Those riven cheeks, taut against blade-sharp
cheekbones, features that gift golden hour. He quietly inhabits the
role of Frank Hopkins, an actual historical figure, part Indian,
who bonds with his half-wild Spanish mustang, Hidalgo, which is the
name for the lowest rung of Spanish nobility. Or, as John Fusco's
script informs us: "Mustang, from the Spanish for untamed."
Hopkins was considered
one of the greatest riders of the American west, but when Hidalgo
begins, his glory days are past. He's drinking his days away in a Wild
West show. He offends a visiting Arab, who then taunts him with the
idea of joining the Ocean of Fire, a life-endangering 3,000-mile race
across the Arabian Desert. The sixty-eight days across the desert are
compressed into a cleanly drawn narrative, not least because the Bedouin
are presented as a parallel horse culture. And when Mortensen's blessed
taciturnity's put up against the incurable ham that is Omar Sharif's
Sheikh Riyadh? A match made in at least the balcony of movie heaven.
Fusco's dialogue
and most of the performers' dry, quiet delivery is witty, rather than
sarcastic, unlike, say, Altman's Buffalo Bill and the Indians.
Hidalgo lacks the arrogance of a vehicle for the younger Harrison Ford
(although Johnston shared an Oscar as visual effects art director on
Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Johnston's an underappreciated
craftsman, with such movies under his belt as The Rocketeer, Honey,
I Shrunk the Kids, Jurassic Park III and October Sky. Of
course, he does note an arrival in an Arabic port by dusk through a
muezzin in full cry atop a minaret, but that's less cliché than
shorthand in these capable hands.
A measure of the
directorial skill on display is how the characters dance a fine line
between amusing and the potentially risible. "You survived the
sandstorm. Allah must have a more severe judgment in store"; "Fear
not the locusts, they are gifts from above"; "Can one believe
an unbeliever"? You know a director's good when he can have an
actor can play a line like, "He is the bastard son of a jackal
who would have his gypsies commit crimes upon her!" and sell it,
with reverberations of the same "innocent" movie thrills savored
by Lucas and Spielberg, but without winking too much. Johnston and Fusco
manage to trump the too-common snarky references back to misremembered
Saturday matinee fodder. (On-screen, Johnston shares his possessory
credit with the writer: it's "a film by Joe Johnston and
John Fusco," a graceful sharing I can only recall on Mike
Hodges' Croupier and I'll Sleep When I'm Dead.)
There is a genre
knowingness to a claim like "God didn't make all men equal, Mr.
Colt did," but I have to love a movie that lets someone say, "Easy,
boys, it's a long way to Damascus." This is not the tin-eared grit
of the misbegotten The Missing. Marvel at how Mortensen can all
but whisper his lines: "Ain't no money worth a man's life, the
way I see it"; "Nobody hurts my horse." He plays tired
real good. Idealism resonates all the way through.
One of the production's
smartest moves was to hire editor Robert Dalva, who collaborated
with director Carroll Ballard on the classic ode to horse-love,
The Black Stallion. The fluent cutting rhythms on the action
scenes is satisfying, and they take it one step further: giving Hidalgo
reaction shots. A simple glance as it turns its head makes for several
memorable, if goofy comic moments.
Cinematographer
Shelly Johnson's credits for television and film are mostly undistinguished,
but his work here is terrific, and Mortensen's the kind of actor-turned-star
who allows himself to be shot in shadow and mottle and shade, a palette
of light that often obscures his features as much as illuminates them.
There are several
terrific scenes including a bad guy attacked by psychotically acrobatic
desert cats, and a breath-swallowing thunderhead of sandstorm. But I
love the ending. It's hopeful, bittersweet, epic: a vast herd of wild
horses set free against a vaster range of hills, undulant flesh against
undulant verdancy. And holding the shot. And choosing the precise gratifying,
heart-stopping frame to place another, similar perspective. It's like
a shot of the ocean, a river, the limitless sky.
-
Ray Pride