(Please note: If you
would prefer not to have much information about the plot of the film
before viewing it for yourself, please be aware that this article contains
several details of the storyline.)
At what point in our lives
do we find the courage to do what we know is right? Not what is right
for a transitory moment or in a situation that, in the greater scheme
of things, means relatively little, but instead to take action that
is unquestionably right in terms of the most basic elements of human
existence. And what if in doing so, we risk everything -- our homes,
our families and loved ones, our own lives? Is it ultimately worth the
terrible price we might pay?
One of Ron Perlman's latest
films, "A Town Has Turned to Dust" is a relentless, uncompromising drama
that asks these questions of its characters and its viewers. The film
pulls us in, perhaps even against our will, and forces us to watch as
its deeply disturbing events unfold. We can't look away, as much as
we might wish to, and ignore the repulsive events being revealed in
this unsettling and disquieting parable because it asks us to question
beliefs that lie in all of us.
Based on a real life event,
Rod Serling's original teleplay of "A Town Has Turned to Dust" dealt
with the events leading up to the death of Emmett Till, a fourteen-year-old
African-American who was lynched in 1955 for whistling at a white woman.
When the show was aired in 1958 on "Playhouse 90," Serling was unable
to halt changes that were made to suit various uneasy sponsors and Southern
television stations. Mississippi in the 1950's became the 1870's American
Southwest; Emmett Till's identity was transformed to that of a Mexican
youth with misguided romantic intentions; and instead of the widespread
and ongoing horrors of the Ku Klux Klan, viewers were shown an impermanent
group of small town vigilantes.
In "Town's" latest incarnation,
where the setting is a ravaged Earth in the year 2215, much of Serling's
original material, including dialogue, has been restored through the
efforts of his widow, Carol Serling who provided drafts of the original
teleplay. Yet this is a story whose truth does not depend on time or
place. The American South in the 1950s or the bitter remains of Earth
in the far distant future, Germany in the late 1930s or modern day Romania,
Egypt 2500 years ago or Northern Ireland today - the names and places
might change, but the story remains the same.
Forty years after "Town"
was first televised, the revised story takes place in "Carbon," a metal-scavenging
center on post-apocalyptic Earth where a group of Native Americans has
been virtually enslaved by the domineering members of the scrap processing
company. Poisoned and polluted by a series of devastating wars, Earth
is a brittle shell where the nurturing of life at any level is almost
impossible. Led by Ron Perlman's character Jerry Paul, who "owns this
town," Carbon is a microcosm of that ruined planet. It is physically
devastated by drought and dust, searing heat and frigid cold; socially
corrupt through avarice, cowardice, and cruelty; and emotionally depleted
by a brutal and oppressive existence where violence can erupt without
warning and no one is safe or at peace.
A reporter from the asteroid
New Angeles, where most of Earth's surviving inhabitants now live, has
been given permission to travel to Carbon to film a documentary about
the mining operation. He suspects there is more to the story than what
appears on the surface and he is determined to uncover its secrets.
Unable to maintain his position as an observer, he slowly becomes drawn
into the town's harsh and violent reality and finally uncovers a truth
beyond his darkest nightmares.
In keeping with Serling's
original focus on racial injustice, a young Native American, Tommy Tall
Bear, has been arrested without proof for the alleged crimes of breaking
and entering and the attempted rape of Jerry Paul's wife, Maya. With
brutal haste, a truly terrifying mob, led by Paul, denies the young
man his rights to a trial, and after dragging him from his prison cell,
hangs him before the silent witnesses of the townspeople and his helplessly
outraged and grieving family. In point of fact, Tommy Tall Bear had
been Maya's lover, a completely unacceptable truth in Jerry Paul's eyes,
one which had to be torn apart and distorted to fit his image of reality.
As the plot of the story later reveals, there has been a long history
of racial prejudice and violence in Carbon, with Jerry Paul and his
cohorts so deeply enmeshed within it that it has become for them an
inescapable and, in many ways, an acceptable way of life.
"A Town Has Turned to
Dust" is a film that deals with universal themes in an unyielding way
that forces us to see ourselves in its characters. Many factors contributed
to its success in making a great impact on its viewers, but I feel the
most essential element was the depth of talent the actors brought to
the portrayal of their characters. Clearly, they approached their roles
with a tremendous amount of sensitivity and understanding, and I very
much admire them for dealing very honestly and effectively with such
difficult issues. I am not an actor, but I imagine it must have been
impossible to completely set aside one's own feelings on such painful
subjects, and perhaps it would have been wrong and less than honest
to do so.
Ron Perlman is brilliant
in the film's lead role. His character is truly a monster, depraved,
ego-driven, and heartlessly cruel, who preys ruthlessly on the weaknesses
of others in order to build up his own strength. Yet through sheer talent,
magnetism, and extremely intelligent acting, Perlman manages to intrigue
us, and, for a variety of reasons, make us truly need to watch Jerry
Paul pursue his devious and destructive machinations. Sometimes it is
like watching a disaster about to happen - we don't want to see it,
but we can't look away - while at other times, we observe Jerry Paul
with a blending of incredulity and hope. How can someone be such a horrible
person, we ask ourselves. What happened in his life to create such a
travesty of humanity? There must be a reason (not that anything could
excuse the things he does), or a moment when he will redeem himself.
As so often has been
true throughout his career, it is entirely to Perlman's incredible talent
that we can feel any shred of sympathy or hope for someone such as Jerry
Paul. Perlman makes the monster a human being -- a terrible, horrifying
human being, but we cannot write him off entirely. In designing his
portrayal of this devastating person, Perlman has conveyed Jerry Paul's
overwhelmingly deplorable characteristics to the extent where we, as
viewers, cannot believe there isn't another, gentler side to him. Yet,
much to our dismay, in the end we find we have been as deftly manipulated
as have the townspeople of Carbon, where very little of value can grow
in the all- pervasive dust.
"Town" has been very
effectively filmed in hot and hazy colors of blood red, dirty grey,
and sulfurous yellow, full of darkness and shadows, brittle filth and
suffocating heat. The harsh, unyielding environment is a mirror image
of the people who live there; its images of cluttered piles of metal
scraps, sterile soil, and preciously hoarded water are perfect representations
of the town's hard-edged, emotionally spent, and nearly hopeless inhabitants.
The costumes are equally effective, with the Native Americans clad in
traditional, "honest" work clothes, and the townspeople shrouded in
headwraps, veils, and layered garments.
Always at the corrupt
heart of the drama are Ron Perlman's Jerry Paul and Stephen Lang's Harvey
Denton. Paul is an egotistical, cruel man who manipulates "mob mentality"
and fear to support his self-serving reality of violence and abuse,
while Denton is a weak-willed, frightened sheriff whose sporadic moments
of courage, although easily smothered in an alcoholic haze, whisper
of his inherent but ineffectual morality. Together they comprise Carbon's
version of "law and order," a deteriorating vigilante mentality fueled
by Jerry Paul, hand in dirty hand with the thin façade of true justice
that cannot be supported by Harvey Denton's fragile strength.
Brilliantly portrayed
by both Perlman and Lang, we soon realize that Paul and Denton are virtually
two faces of the same man, irrevocably linked within a shared history
of violence, selfishness, and guilt. As young men, they - along with
a third friend - despoiled a sacred Bear Cult ceremony designed to bring
rain to the drought-stricken land. When caught, the three youths were
humiliated, but their lives were spared. Yet in retaliation, they returned
to brutally torture and kill Black Cloud, the clan's chief and Tommy
Tall Bear's grandfather. The Native American holy site was destroyed
by Carbon's town leaders, and the entire event became nothing more than
another dirty little secret, rarely spoken of in the seventeen years
since its occurrence during what was once the Christmas season, a traditional
time of "peace on earth."
As they grew into adulthood,
Denton and Paul chose opposing methods of dealing with their guilt.
In becoming the town's sheriff, Denton set himself apart from the others,
becoming something of an outcast, too, although not to the extent of
those he had victimized, and he began to serve his penance by ostensibly
enforcing justice for all. As the years passed, he tried to deal with
the truth and he wanted to do the right thing, but he was never able
to sustain his efforts. He needed rules and laws not only to show him
what is right but also to allow him to do what is right. And when the
rules were rewritten by his friend Jerry Paul, Denton found it all too
easy to let things slide farther and farther into darkness, rather than
to take a stand.
When the young reporter
finally confronts him with his history of weakness and ineffectual attempts
at courage, Denton shows that in his heart he believes it is too late
to change. "You make pictures of our sorrow," he tells the reporter,
trying to convey to him the depth and seriousness of the depravity which
has ravaged his homeland, and his unending hopelessness as well. "Let
this place die in peace."
While Denton wallowed
in a mire of continual failure, Jerry Paul chose to deal with his guilt
by continuing what he had begun, constructing his own version of reality
where truth was nothing more and nothing less than what he proclaimed
it to be. Surrounding himself with ardent followers, indoctrinating
them with his threatening view of "law and order," Paul became their
indisputable leader. Convinced he was right, he manipulated people as
if he owned them body and soul, playing on their weaknesses and fears
until they saw him not only as their leader but also as a version of
themselves. Over time, they might not always like what they see, but
they manage to find their own ways to embrace Paul's image, for how
can they turn away or hide from themselves?
Ron Perlman is outstanding
in the many scenes when Jerry Paul exhibits his control over the inhabitants
of Carbon. Illuminated against a fiery crimson sunset, he stalks along
a metallic catwalk with the controlled strength and grace of a relentlessly
fierce predator, and when he addresses his followers, his voice is full
of strength and all the more frightening for its low, precise tones.
He plays the crowd like a maestro, faultlessly choosing words that will
instill in them great sympathy for his pain, and then smoothly switching
gears to rekindle their blind rage and ignorant faith in his intimidating
and destructive leadership. Beyond his outstanding delivery of dialogue,
Perlman accomplishes all this with exquisitely effective body language
- a turn of the head, an uplifting of his hands, a narrowing of his
eyes. He makes Jerry Paul too believable, too horrifyingly real to allow
the viewer any comfort at all.
It is Ron Perlman's brilliant
portrayal of this key character that gives rise to the most vital points
of the film and forces us to confront our own courage and strength of
conviction. Jerry Paul is everything a leader should not be. He is self-serving,
cruel, and unjust; and yet he is also strong, courageous, caring, and
bold. Aren't those last four characteristics things we look for in a
great leader? Of course they are, but, on the other hand, how does that
leader make use of such attributes? What is his version of the truth?
And is that version our truth as well? If our answer to that question
is no, then when do we tell our leader that he is wrong, how do we dare
to speak the truth or summon the strength to do what we know is right,
even if it is at great personal risk? How do we find the courage to
say no?
Having made himself the
indispensable "ringleader" not only of Carbon's people, but also its
industry, its laws, virtually its entire way of life, a leader like
Jerry Paul rules by cruel intimidation, imposing his version of "truth
and justice" as he so desires, easily crushing those who dare to oppose
him. In their hearts, the townspeople may have deep and disturbing questions
about his actions and their obedience to him, but it is not at all surprising
that his followers have somehow found ways to adopt Jerry Paul's version
of the truth. To do otherwise calls for a strength and courage not easily
won. It can be easier and safer to accept distortions of truth instead.
Yet there comes a time
when there can ultimately be only one truth, and in "A Town Has Turned
to Dust," it is revealed at last. While still harboring the remnants
of love for her husband, Maya Paul finds she is no longer able to contain
her grief and pain, or to continue living a life of full of lies. Emotionally
distraught, she vows to reveal to the townspeople the truth of her relationship
with Tommy Tall Bear, telling Jerry, "You can't change the truth with
a lie." Completely unable to accept this, he tries to stop her, by first
playing on her emotions in a cruel and heartless way that somehow still
conveys a thin thread of sensitivity and honesty unexpected in a man
with such a vicious history, and later by brute force, willing to kill
her rather than face the real truth.
In a scene that is one
of many that are very unsettling to watch, Jerry tries to hold onto
Maya's love, fervently embracing her and, for once, revealing that he
is not an entirely cold and heartless individual. Maya tries to respond
as he wishes her to do, but she cannot set aside years of pain and fear.
In retaliation, Jerry attacks her, verbally and physically, effectively
hiding any shred of love and kindness that might still exist within
him in favor of his persona as a terrifyingly talented master of brutality
and oppression, a role he embraces with more ease and delight than he
is able to hold his wife.
Again, Ron Perlman gives
a fantastic performance in this scene, showing us a hint of the man
Jerry Paul might have been, perhaps even wanted to be at one time, while
horrifying us all over again by his rapid descent back into his tyrannical,
brutal self. It is this scene more than any other that makes us question
the events and motives that created the Jerry Paul who scares and disgusts
us, and I completely credit Mr. Perlman with bringing this important
aspect to the role that makes the character so believable.
A later pivotal scene,
a barroom fight between Jerry Paul and members of Tommy Tall Bear's
family, further reveals the deepening fissures in Paul's once invulnerable
reign. Many of his followers do not defend him in the fight, indicating
that at last their mob mentality might draw them together for the right
reasons. Yet there are more than enough who remain sufficiently under
Paul's control; they embrace his vengeful dictates once again and follow
him out into the streets in pursuit of his enemies.
However, in a hard-hitting
climatic moment outside the town jail, Jerry Paul finds he must finally
face reality, a place where his weakness can no longer be hidden by
the wall of pride he has so aggressively defended all his life. So full
of his own image of himself, he has made the fatal error of beginning
to truly believe his own lies and forgetting that for all their intimidation
and supplication to him, "his" people still have minds of their own.
Demanding that the Native
Americans must be punished for attacking him, Jerry Paul observes the
crowd with expectant arrogance. But the proclamation he hears is not
one of fierce loyalty, but rather clear and utter truth, for this is
when Maya at last tells everyone the truth of her relationship with
Tommy. She does not appear to understand that in doing so, she will
change nothing within her husband and that she has virtually signed
her own death warrant.
Full of pain and rage,
Paul turns toward her, but is halted on his journey of destruction by
the voice of his old friend. "I'm your real enemy," Harvey Denton tells
him. "I'm the only one who really knows you, Jerry." In the devastating
play of emotions across his face, it is clear to all onlookers that
Jerry Paul knows at last that there is a truth not even he can redesign,
and for once there is nowhere to hide.
In the harsh darkness
of night, Harvey Denton redeems himself by rekindling the embers of
truth in the desolate town. He finally does what he has always known
is right, even though he realizes he will pay the ultimate price of
his own life. As he reveals to the townspeople the identities of the
three young men who desecrated the sacred Bear Cult site so many years
ago, Jerry Paul explodes in a cold rage, shooting him, and then turning
the gun toward Maya who has voiced truths of her own. Fatally wounded,
Denton is still able to fire at Paul, saving Maya's life as he falls
across the chest of his longtime friend and alter ego.
In the seventeen years
since that horrible night, Paul and Denton have helped each other evolve
into the men they are as they die together. Finally finding the peace
that had eluded him, Denton murmurs his last words, "Wouldn't you think
after all these years I could finally forget?" While Jerry Paul, silenced
at last, frees his followers to perhaps find their way back to a truth
that holds peace and goodness instead of brutality and evil.
As their bodies are borne
away, the rains begin at last, signaling the tentative beginnings of
growth and rebirth, and perhaps eventual peace among all the people
of Carbon. Yet, as the film ends, we are not left with a sense of optimism
or reassurance, for we know all too well that history repeats itself
time and time again. The reporter's voice echoes our doubts as we leave
this battered world: "So in the end there was no story here…the rain
came too late…the town had already turned to dust…yet we continue to
imagine a future where we might love each other. This may be as close
as we can come."
When you see "A Town
Has Turned to Dust," you will not be able to ignore the very disquieting
messages the film and its extremely talented cast will convey to you.
It is not an easy story to watch, but it is well worth your time and
consideration, and we should commend Ron Perlman for his great contribution
to the film's success in making us think about important issues that
are far more easily ignored.