Savages

Reviewed by: TTallis

September 27, 1999

 

If I may break in and make an introductory video-rental suggestion, if there are any here looking for an interesting diversion, searching out a copy of Merchant-Ivory's Savages may prove rewarding. It's not exactly a period piece, and thankfully it's not exactly Slaves of New York either. From a script by the late Michael O'Donoghue, of all people, and starring Ultra Violet among others, including a strangely pink Sam Waterston, it tells the story of a tribe of primitive mudpeople who follow the trajectory of a mysterious croquet ball to an abandoned Long Island estate. O'Donoghue's early 1970s peak of blending the bizarre with the directly satirical is well utilized, along with plenty of more typically subversive jokes. The psychoanalytical explanatory narration, for example, is delivered in untranslated German, and much of the first half of the film has that hand-tinted film stock common among early silents. Lots of crude tastelessness, too, naturally. I doubt it's something Merchant-Ivory are often prone to pointing to at pitch sessions, but it is a highly interesting oddity.

 

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