Cinema with a Potent Message
Burn! (1968) is a masterpiece of political didacticism, by the director who gave us The Battle of Algiers. Nowhere in the history of cinema has the mechanics of colonialism/imperialism—anglo style (the most insidious)—been as clearly presented, step by step, as this enthralling film does. It’s a testament to the great artistry of Gillo Potecorvo, a moral artist, and his charismatic and often difficult star, Marlon Brando, who worked for a pittance to make this film. His favorite in a long career. It’s simply amazing how few people realize how genuinely progressive Brando was. This remains a well kept secret, his political stance and and “antics” flowing from his idiosycratic leftism presented to the masses as petulant outbursts of a dumb, spoiled celebrity. The same curtain of distortions and ignorance hid and continues to hide the embarrassing fact (for the status quo beneficiaries) that Einstein was a socialist and so was Hellen Keller. Bastards.—PG
BONUS:
‘Queimada’: Revolution In Perpetual Motion (excerpt)
By Stephen Hunter, The Washington Post
“Queimada” (which means “burned” in Portuguese; it was released here as “Burn!” or occasionally as “The Mercenary,” which is a complete misnomer) was his follow-up for a world audience awaiting the new work from the master, with a flamboyant and simpatico American star headlining. But the movie didn’t hit big, and Pontecorvo never worked on so big a scale with so much freedom again. Sic transit gloria mundi.
It’s the 1840s in the Lesser Antilles, lush, sugar-producing islands where the Portuguese rule and rake in the profits. As Pontecorvo has it, the Brits are at war — a trade war, at least — with them and their corrupt and inefficient empire. The sugar-producing island of Queimada is in their sights. Thus the admiralty dispatches an agent, the clever, assured experienced Sir William Walker (his excellency Brando) to stir revolution so that the rich little chunk of loam may be wrested from the Portuguese. Walker, foppish and dandy — he wears billowing scarves, pale, chic linens, riding boots, and sips tea out of a thermos, or maybe it’s cognac — is of a type the British seemed to produce in dazzling numbers: an imperialist comfortable in mufti, clever with languages, self-sufficient, a committed servant to empire, who’s ruthless, cunning, charming and handsome. These boys roamed the world in the Victorian age, plotting and conniving and inspiring Kipling, Mason, Buchanan, Maugham and Ambler, to say nothing of Fleming.
Walker makes his reconnaissance and writes the place off: The black natives are too whipped and beaten, their Portuguese masters too entrenched. But he meets a man named Jose Delores (amateur actor Evaristo Marquez, who appeared in three more movies, then never worked again), in whom he sees the possibility of leadership. Thus, acting through Jose, he quickly and cleverly conjures a revolutionary movement and then an army and soon the battle is fully joined and bloody. Ultimately, playing the sides against each other but coming to love the brave Jose Delores, Walker pries the Portuguese grip free of Queimada. A provisional government takes over, signs favorable trade agreements with the British, and everybody is happy, except possibly Jose Delores.
Ten years pass. The provisional government turns corrupt, the British sugar merchants become greedy, conditions collapse on the island, and Jose Delores begins another revolution, this time against the British. And of course, who is called in to hunt him down but his old friend, Sir William Walker (Brando doesn’t wear the blond wig in the second half of the film, signifying the passage of time). Walker, though he’s British, pretty much encapsulates the trajectory of American history, at least through 1969; he begins as a revolutionary and he ends as a counter-revolutionary.
The parallels to Vietnam are obvious: At one point, he has to engineer a coup to get a reluctant government out of office and install a more aggressive one, just as we did to rid ourselves of the Diems. He ultimately must call in combat troops from the homeland. His version of Agent Orange is indeed orange, orange as in flame, as he burns the jungle clear to capture or kill the guerrillas.
Pontecorvo, to his credit, plays fair. He’s not a sentimentalist who makes the bad capitalists and colonial administrators pompous fools. As he had in “Battle of Algiers,” he admires courage and professionalism no matter which side of the spectrum they occur on, and far from making Sir William an evil clown, he makes him an excitingly compelling character, just as he had done with Jean Martin’s Col. Mathieu, the cool French paratroop officer in “Battle of Algiers.” And he has a terrific eye for squalor of violence: His various fights and assassinations and coups and burnings are never rendered gloriously, as triumphs of the spirit, but always, no matter the circumstances or the author, dispiriting and sickening.
But the movie is most powerful as argument: It believes in the permanence of revolution, and it closes on a shot of the surly, bitter, seething people of Queimada, and in their anger it sees a forever of violence. This is the way it will go, he seems to be saying, and it doesn’t seem that he got that one wrong, unless peace broke out in the past five minutes. It’s brilliantly constructed to argue what might be called the classic imperial paradox: To win this war you must make inevitable the next. The corollary is that as long as there are empires, there will be wars.
—SH