"Strange Way Of Life" /10/06/23/Picturehouse Clapham/13:10)
Silva (Pedro Pascal) crosses the desert that separates his ranch from the town of Bitter Creek on horseback. He's going to visit Sheriff Jake (Ethan Hawke), a friend from his youth, when both worked as hired gunmen. The action takes place in 1910, and the two men are in their fifties. Silva is of Mexican origin, a solid guy, emotional, elusive, a cheat, if necessary, warm. It's been twenty-five years since he last saw Sheriff Jake, blond, strict, cold, inscrutable, almost the opposite to Silva. That night, at the Sheriff's house, they eat a meat stew Jake has cooked, they drink, and they make love, all of it in abundance. The next morning, Silva wants the party to continue, but he finds a stony Jake, who's nothing like the man from the night before. This is the sequences that follow that orgiastic night in which both characters confront their past and their present in totally different ways. This is the heart of the story, the argument while they get dressed the following morning. In this argument, the ulterior motives are revealed, as well as the passion that they lived when they were younger, and that's still beating within them, even though Jake doesn't want to admit it once they are sober.
Jake has to go after a murderer who, according to an eyewitness, is Silva's son. And Silva has to intercede for him, trying to convince Jake that his son is innocent and that he should stop searching for him. All this, the sheriff’s duty as opposed to a father’s grief, mixed with reproaches and declarations of love from two lovers who haven’t seen each other in twenty-five years and who live their lives at opposite ends of the desert. These are the ten central minutes of the film. We still didn’t know what the story would be, or if there would even be a story, but the film gives voice to these two middle-aged, queer men who traditionally have remained silent in a genre like the western. The film is attracted by the idea of breaking that silence. "Brokeback Mountain" by Ang Lee is the closest Hollywood has come to telling a story about two men who love each other and talk about it, but the lovers in Ang Lee’s film are shepherds, so we don’t include the film in the western genre. There are westerns with gay characters, like "Warlock" by Edward Dmytryk. The script abounds in data about the passionate relationship between its two protagonists, Anthony Quinn and Henry Fonda, but no one talks about it even though their relationship is one of the axes of the film. This turns Dmytryk’s film into a strange western or one with a badly written script. The film is only understood if both of them are lovers, but that word is never mentioned.
It's a western filmed in a town built in Almeria for Sergio Leone as a set for his legendary dollar trilogy, with Clint Eastwood. The passing of time, fifty years of it, has given authenticity to the place, today being dusty and old. The typical artifice of what had been a film set fifty years ago had now disappeared. The film respects the rules of the genre without falling into any anachronistic temptation, except for the song at the beginning, with the voice of Caetano Veloso and the angelical face of Manu Ríos, which gives the film its title. In Sheriff Jake’s house there are several paintings by Maynard Dixon, one of the first artists, if not the first, to paint landscapes from the American West, with native Indians and cowboys. It's a discovery, his work possesses a coloring untypical of the time that brings it close to pop and at times to impressionism. There's also a portrait of the artist Lily Langtry, very famous at the start of the century, who actually made a silent film and whom Ava Gardner plays in "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" along with Paul Newman. The other great artist who appears on the walls of the ranch is Georgia O’Keefe, the Mexican landscape that hangs over Silva’s bed.
The film takes inspiration not so much from the reality of the time but from cinema, how actors were dressed in westerns between 1900 and 1915. If anyone wonders about Pedro Pascal wearing a green jacket, we remember "Bend of the River" by Anthony Mann, where James Stewart wears an identical green jacket. The film is also inspired by Vera Cruz (Robert Aldrich), specifically for the outfit worn by Silva's murderous son Joe. It's inspired by Burt Lancaster, all black. And Sheriff Jake, he's in a suit, with a vest and bola tie, like almost all the sheriffs in the Westerns we've watched. Kirk Douglas is one of the models, whether playing a sheriff or a card player, "Gun Fight at the OK Corral" or in "Last Train from Gun Hill", both by John Sturges. The male wardrobe has changed very little, the sheriff is always the most elegant, usually with a suit, waistcoat, the fabric of the waistcoat is the only thing that allowed you some fantasy, with shiny damasks, shirt and around the neck a bola tie. The rest of the male characters always wear a scarf around their necks, in different colours and patterns, a checked shirt and a waistcoat. The dresses of the Mexican prostitutes are inspired by "El Dorado" (Howard Hawks). Despite the fact that in Spain we have a great tradition of spaghetti westerns, more than a hundred were filmed in the 60s and 70s.
Written by Gregory Mann