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The Treasure of the Sierre Madre
So maybe I'll just ramble a bit and see what I come up with. First off, this is a guy movie, in the sense the Clint Eastwood movie Unforgiven was. With the exception of Ann Sheridan making a brief appearance as a passing prostitute (miss it if you blink), I can't think of a single woman in the movie. There are certainly no female characters in it. The movie is very much about men, especially men when they're together. It's kind of a macho movie, though turned in on itself. Rather than masculine bravado and muscle flexing, it's about masculine insecurities and paranoia.
Huston was a bit different than Ford, though. Where Ford's movies were essentially informed by a masculine romanticism, Huston's tend to be informed by a sense of tragedy and realism (or reality as perceived by Huston). In The Treasure of the Sierra Madre we get the essence of Huston's take on men: essentially lonely and plaqued by doubts. In what is likely his best performance ever, Humphrey Bogart nails these qualities exactly. His Fred C. Dobbs literally comes apart on the screen. What happens to him seems inevitable and unfolds inexorably. The more he acquires of what he perceives to be life's essence, the acquistion of wealth, the more divorced he becomes from the life around him, and the more inward he goes, the closer to inevitable tragedy.
I don't think it is the latter but I do think it's worth keeping in mind that the characters in the story begin from a position of poverty. It's worth asking if what happens would have happened had they been better off materially. © 2003 Piddleville Inc. |
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