Papillon
There is a
distinct and very popular sub-genre called (at least in my book) prison break
movies/series. This is not a favorite of mine, but there are a number of excellent
representatives of this genre on the List. “A Man Escaped”, “The Shawshank Redemption”
and “Papillon” to mention a few.
They have
this in common that someone we would root for have been imprisoned (unfairly)
and in an escape-room-like challenge attempts to gain the freedom the System
will not grant him. This is the ultimate freedom of the individual against the oppressive
structures of the majority scenario. In the case of “Papillon” this person is
Papillon (Steve McQueen), based on the real-life character of Henri Charrière.
At the
opening of the movie a group of French prisoners are being moved from France to
a penal colony in French Guyana, among these Papillon. We never learn exactly
how he got there, but it is hinted that he was falsely accused of murder to get
him out of the way. En-route to South America Papillon befriends the geeky
Louis Dega (Dustin Hoffman) a notorious forger who apparently caused a
financial scandal where many people lost a lot of money. Dega has hidden away a
lot of money where the sun does not shine and Papillon, seeing this man needs
protection, considers a friendship with Dega a win-win situation.
The prison
in French Guyana is not a pleasant place. It is hard work, diseases and
humiliation and Papillon, despite dire warnings, is looking for ways to escape.
Turns out there is an entire industry of luring prisoner’s money by offering
fraud escape routes. Papillon’s first escape attempt falls into one such trap
and he spends the next two years in isolation. Dega tries to smuggle in food to
him, and when it is discovered, rather than ratting on Dega, Papillon endures
by eating bugs.
Papillon’s
stay in prison becomes a continuation of escape attempts and hard punishment
and that seems to be the morale of the story. The prison system against the spirit
of this man. We see many others who lose this fight and either break or die or
both (the system does not want to correct the prisoners, it wants revenge), but
Papillon refuse to do either. Papillon may be fighting a futile battle, but the
fact that he continues to fight it is a victory in itself.
Louis Dega
handles the disappointments differently. He bends and closes up inside himself.
By the end he is not entirely mad, but so secluded in his own world, and comfortable
there, that he cannot be reached, neither by Papillon nor by the system.
“Papillon”
works because the prison system is as brutal as it is and because Papillon and
Dega are as sympathetic as they are. In fact, it is difficult to see any of the
prisoners as deserving and that makes them more like KZ prisoners. This makes
the struggle morally easy and let it focus on the philosophical dilemma between
individual freedom and conformity. Of course, this is a brutal simplification
and leaves out all the arguments for having a penal system in the first place,
but that is not where this movie wants to go, and the simplification gives it
clarity.
Another reason
why it is works is the very high production value. McQueen and Hoffman were at
this point at their peak and it shows. The acting if first rate and dialogue is
only a small part of it. The set design is exquisite with a copy of the
original prison and jungle scenery so steamy and humid that you feel it
watching the movie. My only complaint, really, is that the whole thing takes
place in English and not in French. This threw me in the beginning, but
eventually I got used to it and had it been in French, I doubt we would have
gotten Steve McQueen and Dustin Hoffman as Papillon and Louis Dega.
“Papillon”
is a definite recommendation from me and another great movie from 1973. This is quickly becoming one of the good
years in cinema.
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ReplyDeleteI think Steve McQueen really deserved an Oscar nod for this. He got way inside his character instead of playing himself as he often does. Reportedly, he was passed over because he "stole" Ali McGraw, who he later married, from Robert Towne who was then the the production head at Paramount.
ReplyDeleteI did not know that story. So typical.
DeleteSteve McQueen was magnificent here exactly, as you say, because he was not just being himself. I also love how much non verbal acting there is.