SORCERER
(1977, Friedkin)
A film from William Friedkin
"No one is just anything"
That is the statement given by the wife of wealthy French banker Victor Manzon (Bruno Cremer) as they discuss a story about soldiers and how they follow orders, how their actions affect others, and how more often than not fate plays a hand in how our lives and the lives of others end up. Something that Victor will experience hours after this discussion in this sorta "remake" of 1953's
The Wages of Fear.
Sorcerer follows Victor, along with three other characters: Jackie (Roy Scheider), Nilo (Francisco Rabal), and Kassem (Amidou), all of which are wanted and on the run for different reasons leading them to the remote South American village of Porvenir. But as the above quote says, no one is just anything. The four of them are more than just wanted men, but what will fate have in store for them here? Turns out it is two trucks loaded with unstable dynamite.
This is a film that has been recommended to me for years, but being the completist that I am, I wanted to see
Wages first (which I did last year). So when William Friedkin passed away a couple of weeks ago, I thought it was way overdue for me to check this out and I'm so glad I did. Much like
Wages, this film is the perfect representation of "constant tension", which haunts these three characters from wherever they come from to every bar and every jungle road where they end up.
What Friedkin does different than director Henri-Georges Clouzot is to give a bit more depth and background to these characters. Now, granted, I don't think background and explanations are always necessary, but those first 30 minutes where you see how these four characters end up where they're at are really effective and give a lot of weight to what will happen in the rest of the film.
Also, the way that Friedkin puts us in those trucks, and how seamlessly he lets us see where they're driving and how they're driving it's extremely well done. Certainly, there is a bit of a stretch in believing that anyone would look at this rickety old-ass bridge and still think they can drive two big trucks through, but that still gives us one of the most breathtakingly tense moments of the film.
I also massively appreciated the many ways in which Friedkin managed to differentiate this film from
The Wages of Fear, because as similar as they are, he still follows different beats and different paths in that last half that still kept me on my toes. So, even though some people would call this a remake, no film is just anything. And as good as
The Wages of Fear is, this film is just a bit more.
Grade: