Over the past month (and as early as yesterday), I’ve made
my appreciation for John Boorman’s Deliverance
abundantly clear. So, by this point, there’s no need for me to casually remark
how much this film terrifies me – it is, without question, the most horrifying
film I’ve ever seen. And its most infamous scene is reason enough to thank for
that.
Note: The scene in
question has been discussed, mocked, ridiculed, made famous and everything in
between, ten times over. With all that in mind, I’m going to discuss it in
great detail. Detail that would be best appreciated by people who’ve seen the film.
Midway through the film, harmless-if-not-helpless city boys,
Ed (Jon Voight) and Bobby (Ned Beatty), dock their canoe on a riverbank as a
means of letting fearless Lewis (Burt Reynolds) and moralistic Drew (Ronny Cox)
catch up to them. Seconds after stepping away from their canoe, down from the
thick wilderness walk two mountain men. They approach the city boys, and then
things get ugly.
Most everyone knows what this scene is building to, but in
fact, the moments leading up to the rape are just as excruciating as the rape
itself. Watch, for example, the subtle look the Mountain Man (Bill McKinney)
gives the Toothless Man (Herbert Coward) after briefly interrogating Ed and
Bobby:
It’s a look that says, “Yeah, we’re doing this.” And damn if
our city boys have no idea what’s coming. Moreover, I’ve seen Deliverance dozens upon dozens of times,
and with each passing viewing, some fraction of me hopes Ed and Bobby will
somehow talk their way out of it. Such as in the brief moment when the Mountain
Man slightly relents his terror by leaning against a tree and talking with his
hands, asking Ed and Bobby if he heard something correctly (“Didn’t you say
somethin’ bout, makin’ whiskey…”):
But moments after Voight weakly attempts to dialogue his way
out of the situation: (“Gentlemen, we can talk this over, what is it that
you…require?”), Ed is being harnessed to a tree with his belt, while Bobby is
ordered to undress (Beatty’s half-hearted prayers during this scene, as if he’s
desperately trying to remember a specific prayer, should’ve earned the actor an
Oscar nomination).
And then it happens.
There’s a chase, a struggle, a brief pause. And then it
happens.
Once finished, the Mountain Man (note: watch the way
McKinney, exerted and unsatisfied, slowly lifts his leg all the way over not
one but two branches, without using his arms. There’s something about that
movement, and I’m not entirely sure what, but it’s just so uniquely mortifying)
walks toward his toothless partner. There’s more to be had.
They untie Ed, who is not-so-subtly told to perform forced
fellatio on the Toothless Man. And then we see it.
Cutting to Ed’s point of view, we gracefully pull focus to
see Lewis and Drew dock their canoe next to our stranded victims’ boat. Now,
pay attention here, because this is the moment of Boorman’s career. Most any
movie (made then or now) would immediately cut to Burt Reynolds in his canoe.
They’d show Lewis slowly looking around, spotting Ed on his knees, a gun to his
face, before Lewis quietly scrambled to find, assemble, and prepare his bow and
arrow. That’s called cross cutting, and it’s a technique that’s as effective as
it’s not. So, instead of showing the action, we stay with Ed and the criminals, wondering when/if/how/when the
tough, brooding Lewis will find them.
The second after Ed spots Lewis, we once again jump cut to
Ed’s point of view and are privy to the finest zoom shot in cinema history.
Burt Fucking Reynolds, standing tall and stiff, arrow pulled back, ready.
Back
to an objective shot, an arrow soon pierces through the Mountain Man as Ed and
Drew attempt to catch the Toothless Man.
There’s a chase, a struggle, a brief pause. And then it
happens.
Then Burt Fucking Reynolds walks into frame, smiling
amicably at his slayed game, proud of his victory.
Now, I’ve spent a great portion of this post detailing the
many flawless technical aspects of this scene, and that’s for good reason. I
often find myself defending films that contain harsh, seemingly
brutal-for-the-sake-of-being brutal, moments. I don’t enjoy watching rape in
movies. In fact, it’s the thing I like least
in films. Despite this, there remains a fact that many many good, worthy films
contains moments of rape and/or extreme violence. I’m no proponent of violence
(in film or otherwise), but, sometimes, it’s necessary. And, if necessary,
hopefully it is handled in such a fashion as to not glorify it, which is
precisely what Boorman did with Deliverance.
There’s nothing fancy or stylized about the horrendous act
that occurs in this film. Boorman opts for long takes and controlled acting to
propel the story. Deliverance is one
of the best films I’ve ever viewed, and this scene is nothing if not absolutely
necessary. It’s essential, but has never once shied away from scaring the shit
out of me.
Halloween Horror Marathon Posts:
Friday the 13th Franchise Breakdown
Hannibal Lecter Franchise Breakdown
Psycho Franchise Breakdown
Top 10 Horror Films
Top 10 Scariest Non-Horror Films
Hannibal Lecter Franchise Breakdown
Psycho Franchise Breakdown
Top 10 Horror Films
Top 10 Scariest Non-Horror Films
That is a great scene. Scary and extremely disturbing. Yet, it showed a time when Burt Reynolds was a god, not the joke that he is now.
ReplyDeleteA scary and disturbing scene indeed. Man, I really thought Boogie would bring Burt back in the best possible way. Sadly, it appears to have been his sawn song.
DeleteExcellent write-up man. I'll have to rewatch this film soon, even if it is disturbing. ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks! It's definitely a tough watch, but a worthy one for sure.
DeleteExcellent post! I saw this movie eons ago -- not expecting to like it at all -- and I remember thinking it was a very unique and remarkable film. I love the way you broke down and explained what made it so effective, using images. You really knocked it out of the ballpark here. ;-)
ReplyDeleteAw thanks Stephanie. Glad you dug the post. Love this movie, love this scene.
DeleteCan't argue with that. It is a devastatingly effective scene and one of many very memorable moments in Deliverance.
ReplyDeleteNice, glad you agree!
DeleteTrue story: I saw Deliverance many years ago right after I got out of college. There was a cable channel that showed tons of movies, and where I had almost no money to live on right out of college, I watched a lot of this channel's movies. That's really how I got started watching movies.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I saw Deliverance and liked it. The next day at work I mentioned it to a co-worker and she asked me, "what about the rape scene?" My response was "what rape scene?" It turns out that the channel had cut that out of their broadcast of the movie. In hindsight it made sense since it was a channel with commercials on it and they might have lost some advertisers.
I've never bothered to seek out this movie and watch it again just to see that scene. It's not something I want to expend time and money on seeing.
Ha, that's hysterical. So you've never gone back and watched the whole unedited movie all the way through? If that channel left out the rape scene, I can't imagine what else they left out (of Deliverance and from other movies too).
DeleteLove this scene. Love this movie. Glad you agree so strongly on both fronts. More people need to see Deliverance nowadays- scariest shit ever.
ReplyDeleteOh, for sure. I'm always pushing this movie on people. So damn scary.
Delete