Sometime in the
mid-to-late 70s a ten-year-old Hopper sat with his younger brother and his
father and watched the Richard Harris western A Man Called Horse. If you
have viewed the movie, you know the one scene that it is famous for. If you haven’t seen it, well, stick around,
I’ll get to it in a few paragraphs.
My father, God
rest his soul, lacked the ability to bring a sense of appropriateness to the
viewing of movies with his children.
Very much like Howard Stern’s father taking young Howard to see Barbarella in the theaters. Similarly, my dad’s appropriateness problem
also applied to movies with high sexual content, as well as movies with high
violent content. In the early 80s, for
instance, my father took me and my younger brother, both of us barely teens, to
see Hotdog: The Movie and Al Pacino’s
Scarface.
None of this was
helped by the fact that in the mid-70s our neighborhood was invaded by Cable
TV. I wrote about that a bit, here (in a reference to another shocking 70s movie, to a ten-year-old).
A Man Called Horse is a fairly decent enough Western aimed
at a more mature crowd than ten-year-old Hopper. It’s thoroughly a product of its time – 1970,
I believe it was made – so it flirts with anti-Western themes and
psychedelia. Which is not to say it’s a
bad movie, it’s not; it just ain’t a John Wayne type of flick.
Richard Harris,
an actor I loved since watching him in Orca,
seen by me and a whole bunch of my fourth-grade friends around the same time as
I saw Horse, plays a refined and
somewhat snobby Englishman John Morgan off on a hunting jaunt in 1835 frontier America .
Five minutes into the film Injuns ambush and kill his guides while the
obtuse Englishman bathes naked in the river.
Suddenly ropes lasso round his neck and he’s dragged helpless as a babe
from the water, captive of a Sioux war party.
Ignorant of the Indian language, he’s made out to be no more than a
beast, a horse, dragged into his captors village to live the life of a subhuman
captive.
We follow Morgan
through several failed escape attempts.
Though beaten, he does not resign himself to the fate Sioux captivity
has in store for him. With the aid of a
long-term prisoner, a slightly insane French trapper, our hero regains his dignity,
learns the ways and the morality of the tribe, wins its respect, gains a wife,
and, ultimately, becomes its chief (sorta).
Two-thirds
through the movie is The Scene. The
Scene that permanently etched a groove in my brain, an image that freaked out me
and my brother as children, though it now seems somewhat tame by mature
Me. In order to prove his worthiness of
an Indian mate, Morgan must undergo a test of courage. In a tent filled with the elders, a medicine
man takes what looks like eagle talons and carves up the English Indian’s
chest. Then, sharp bones and inserted
horizontally into his pecs. Ropes are
lowered down, fastened on these bones, and Richard Harris, in all his
prosthetic-chest glory, is raised ten feet off the ground, spun around, and has
a sixty-second acid trip.
Whoa.
That felt good,
writing to get that out of my system.
Anyway, back to
the subject of appropriateness and movies.
Against my wife’s judgment, I decided to watch A Man Called Horse with Little One yesterday afternoon. As frequent readers here know, I enjoy a
special bond with my oldest where we watch movies of all stripes together. (N.B. This special bond has to wait for Patch
until she outgrows her fear of the dark.)
I let Little One know I watched this movie with my dad when I was her
age, and I let her know there is a pretty gross scene in it that I never
forgot. Well, once I mentioned those two
things she had to watch the movie with me in its entirety. When the courage ritual came on screen, she
really wasn’t as wide-eyed as I was at her age. Is it because of cultural desensitization,
cultural coarseness? Or is she just made
of heartier stock than me? I guess I’ll
never know (though I think both explanations are possible in equal
measure). But I’ll tell you one thing:
we had a great afternoon watching a movie together.
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