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Drifting out of the Territory: Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kidby Maximilian Le Cain In 1961, Peckinpah graduated from an exceptional career in television to direct his first feature, The Deadly Companions. One year later, he established both his greatness and his most characteristic themes with the dignified Ride the High Country, a moving Western elegy that has quite rightly become an established classic. If he arrived just too early to be part of the new generation (i.e. Hopper, Penn), he was also too young to be classed with the Old Masters of the Western such as Ford and Walsh. Peckinpah was responsible for the most influential American Western of the '60s, The Wild Bunch (1969). Due to its spectacular reinvention of screen violence, it understandably remains Peckinpah's most popular film. Equally understandably, if regrettably, it typecast him, making his name synonymous with the graphic depiction of violence to the frequent neglect of his more subtle virtues as a director. For better or worse, this cathartic vision of flawed heroism changed the face of genre filmmaking. As an actor's director, Peckinpah invested his best films with an extraordinary depth of characterisation. He was as tender as he was tough, his evident love for his bruised, often brutal anti-heroes setting him apart from most storytellers. His finest works are permeated with an intensely haunting atmosphere of melancholy, loss, and displacement. His heroes are exiles, men out of step with their dehumanised times, alienated from love or domesticity, yearning for a redemption that they seem able to find only in self-destruction. It is a dark but intensely romantic vision. If for nothing else, Peckinpah admires his heroes for their staunch individualism in the face of a world that is changing for the worse, eroding under the blindly ruthless power of money. This overriding sense of poetic despair achieved its fullest expression in the early '70s with Peckinpah's two greatest and bleakest films: Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid and Bring me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974). Revisionism was the order of the day in the early '70s Western and numerous directors were having a go at debunking the myth of the West, with movies such as Little Big Man (Arthur Penn, 1970), Soldier Blue (Ralph Nelson, 1970), McCabe and Mrs Miller (Robert Altman, 1971) The Culpepper Cattle Co. (Dick Richards, 1972), Bad Company (Robert Benton, 1972) and Buffalo Bill and the Indians (Robert Altman, 1976). With an arsenal that ran from sarcasm to visceral bombast, these younger directors attempted to use the mythology of the most purely American art form to criticise modern American society. Ironically, none of these films, which seem to be striving so hard to be up to date in their thinking, have aged well, often appearing much less powerful than many of the sort of films they set out to attack. One movie obviously made with a different set of intentions was Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid. Whereas the revisionist directors gleefully attacked the genre from outside with often glibly political ideas, Peckinpah used this film to deconstruct not the famous figures of the Western nor its landscape, but its narrative form. Peckinpah allows the oft-filmed characters of Pat and Billy to retain their mythological status unlike, say, Altman's Buffalo Bill or Penn's Wild Bill Hickock or General Custer in Little Big Man. Unlike the revisionists, Peckinpah displayed a deep and genuine love for the West and its macho values to which he subscribed in life. But he also had a first hand knowledge of their shortcomings which only intimacy and affection can provide. Even if David Weddle's fine biography If They Move - Kill 'em indicates that Peckinpah's famous rough and ready frontier upbringing was later exaggerated by the director, he fully lived up to the myth. By all accounts as larger than life as any of his heroes, Peckinpah was a hard living, hard drinking, womanising, knife throwing self-destructive with a prominent streak of genuine artistic sensitivity. In Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, Peckinpah laid these shortcomings bare in a way no director before or since has been able to. Unlike the revisionists, his best films were at least partially self-portraits as opposed to 'issue' movies. He exposed the emptiness at the heart of the myth from the inside with the same anguish that he might feel in disclosing a fatal disease from which he was suffering. It is this depth of feeling that really sets this film apart from its contemporaries and has ensured its survival in the face of time. Although The Wild Bunch gave Peckinpah the reputation of being a flamboyant visual stylist, his approach to the look of Pat Garrett was much more muted. Director of photography John Coquillon's formally composed images are suffused with an appropriately dusky magnificence that has led Pat Garrett to be called Peckinpah's most visually beautiful film. The aggressive editing patterns he often employed are also minimised, coming into play in some imaginative inter-cutting at the start and close of the movie. * * * Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid is a film about betrayal, about the extent to which people can remain true to themselves in the face of changing times. At its centre is Pat Garrett, played by James Coburn with an understated intensity. He gives up his old life and companions to become Sheriff and ends up having to hunt down and kill his best friend, Billy the Kid. It is a process of self-betrayal as the Kid represents everything Garrett has to sacrifice in order to integrate himself into the new order. The conflict between the two is made explicit in a dialogue exchange in the opening scene. When Billy asks him how his selling out feels, the newly elected Sheriff replies "it feels like times have changed." "Times, maybe. Not me" is the Kid's answer. The Kid, played by Kris Kristofferson, is a rather enigmatic character, an easygoing free spirit who is never fleshed out but left as almost a symbol. His laid back inscrutability is a brilliant, subtly taunting contrast to Garrett's increasing grimness. While Garrett allies himself with the ruthless forces of big business ("every goddamn landowner trying to put a fence 'round this country"), Billy is close to the poor. This is brought home in the jailbreak scene when a Mexican peasant helps him in his escape. The expression on the Mexican's face speaks volumes. As the film progresses we see Garrett become increasingly alienated and sadistic in his pursuit of the Kid. This reaches its highpoint in a saloon scene in which he comes across a number of members of Billy's gang, whom he terrorises and humiliates before killing one of them. He then proceeds to a brothel where all the girls working there service him. It is at this point that he is informed of the Kid's whereabouts. Chronologically, the last we see of Garrett is in a flash-forward to 1909 when he has become a landowner himself, the transformation from what he was during his days with Billy now complete. Yet for all this, Peckinpah never quite puts him at the level of the forces of big business. When offered a bribe to bring the Kid in, he tells some of the wealthiest and most powerful men in the state what they can do with their money in graphic detail. As a sharp contrast to even Garrett and as a sort of ambassador of the new order, there is the businessmen's own bounty hunter, John Poe (John Beck), sent to 'help' Garrett. A thoroughly evil man, who thinks nothing of beating up old people, he even wants to cut the dead Kid's finger off for a trophy. Although he is treated with contempt, his viciousness is seen to prevail: he is still around in the 1909 flash-forward, participating in Pat Garrett's murder. If Garrett and the Kid are the opposite poles of reaction to the changes occurring around them, their extremes are put into contrast by a number of other characters' reactions. Some, like Billy's sympathetic jailer, J. W. Bell (Matt Clark) who claims that "the only belief I have is knowing I'm a little man with a job to do", are resigned to blowing with the prevailing winds. Many are so sickened with the way things have gone that they just want to leave, to 'drift' (to 'drift', seemingly the only form of movement available to characters in this film) out of the territory: the disgruntled lawman played by Slim Pickens who dies in a gunfight; Billy's friend Paco (Emilio Fernandez) who tries to take his family back to Mexico but is tortured to death en route by men in the employ of big rancher John Chisum; or the character played by Peckinpah himself at the end of the movie. There is no way out. Even when Billy himself tries to go to Mexico, he comes upon the dying Paco and turns back to avenge his murder, only to be killed by Garrett that night. Paco's last words movingly express a yearning for a future to believe in. He describes a house he would have built for them in Mexico and the ordered, idyllic existence they would have there: "I will have three chairs and I will sit in the middle one and anyone who doesn't do right according to nature and my mother, I will blow his head off". (A good example of the unusually rich dialogue writer Rudy Wurlitzer filled his screenplay with.) But when Billy sets out for Mexico he gets a rather more realistic view of his possible future from one of his gang, played by Harry Dean Stanton: "Hell, in Old Mex you ain't gonna be nothing but another drunken gringo shitting out chilli peppers and waiting for ... nothing." It might be an exaggeration to call Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid a series of death scenes, but not much of one. Even children play on the gallows, in a scene reminiscent of the children torturing scorpions in a red ant's nest in the famous opening of The Wild Bunch. The scene that perhaps best encapsulates the mood is one that is blatantly 'unnecessary' in terms of traditional narrative construction, but one of the most haunting and evocative Peckinpah ever shot. Garrett sits under a tree overlooking a river. A houseboat carrying a family drifts by. The father is shooting at a bottle drifting in front of the boat. Garrett raises his gun and takes a shot. Startled the father turns and points his gun at Garrett, who aims at him in turn. For a long tense moment, the two men stand poised for violence. Then the boat drifts out of sight. All of this death foreshadows and culminates in one of the most eerily beautiful pieces of filmmaking in the history of the cinema: Billy's death. This fifteen-minute scene inter-cuts Billy's arrival at the house of his friend, rancher Pete Maxwell (Paul Fix) and his final tryst with his girl with Garrett's (and Poe's) final search for him. Much credit for its atmosphere must go to Dylan's unforgettably haunting music. Not since history remorselessly engulfed the heroes and sometimes whole casts of films such as Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), They Were Expendable (1945) and Fort Apache (1948), has the inevitable closing in of destiny been so movingly evoked. Pat Garrett captures a potentially Fordian moment of myth taking over from life. But in place of the bittersweet self-sacrifice of Ford's heroes, defined by Peter Bogdanovich as 'glory in defeat', Peckinpah presents us with a vision of remorseless, numbed out despair. As Billy arrives at the ranch, old Pete launches into the last of the melancholy anecdotes that so often accompany killing in this film, telling about a murder performed by putting a rattlesnake into a man's bedroll. But his reminiscences are addressed to the empty room as Billy and the girl have retired to a bedroom. Their lovemaking is tender and gentle, a contrast to Garrett's whorehouse exploits in the previous scene. Meanwhile, the hunters close in. The dusty, nocturnal landscape through which the lawmen prowl is shot by Coquillon to almost resemble an alien planet from a science fiction film. Immediately prior to locating Billy, Garrett is accosted by Peckinpah playing a self-referential cameo role, giving voice to the Sheriff's conscience. Peckinpah's character claims that he will bury all his possessions and leave the territory, decisively elevating Garrett's betrayal from a personal or legal matter to one that affects the whole country. Then he taunts him "When are you going to learn you can't trust anybody, not even yourself Garrett." After killing the Kid, Garrett shoots his reflection in a mirror, before examining his face in the remaining shards. His spiritual death is complete. All he has to do is wait some thirty years for his actual death to catch up with him. The West is not only dead, it is death itself. So much for the optimistic myth of the traditional Western. In the two hours it took him to tell the story of Pat Garrett killing Billy the Kid, Sam Peckinpah killed the Western. There has been a handful of great Westerns since - The Shootist (Siegel, 1976), Unforgiven (Eastwood, 1992), Last of the Mohicans (Michael Mann, 1993), - but none of them have significantly developed the genre or taken it anywhere near as far as the heart of darkness Peckinpah reaches in this, his last Western. © Maximilian Le Cain, March 2001 Maximilian Le Cain is a filmmaker and cinephile living in Cork City, Ireland. He has has written for the magazine Film West. |
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