Caine’s performance makes noise in ‘Quiet American’
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Based on the novel by Graham Greene, “The Quiet American” is a
movie of intrigue and mystery, told in flashback, film noir style,
beginning with the discovery of a dead body floating face down in
Saigon Harbor and then recounting how it came to be there.
Starring Michael Caine as Thomas Fowler, a cynical and uninvolved
veteran British journalist covering the Vietnamese liberation war
with the colonialist French in Indochina, the action takes place
around 1952, just before America’s involvement in Vietnam -- or is
the U.S. already involved?
This is a central theme of the movie, but the story revolves
around and focuses on Fowler, who has a wife back home in London, but
also has a beautiful young Vietnamese mistress, Hei Phuong (Hai Yen
Do).
After being notified that he is to be recalled to England, Fowler
schemes to come up with a story that will convince his editors to
keep him in Vietnam. He then meets and befriends a likable and
idealistic young American, a quiet American, Alden Pyle (Brendan
Frasier).
Pyle is in Vietnam on a humanitarian medical mission. Upon meeting
Phuong, he falls hopelessly in love with her. Thus a love triangle is
born; soon it will grow into a murder mystery.
Though Frasier is good as Pyle, and the beautiful Hai Yen Do
admirable as the childlike and innocent Phuong, the film is carried
by Caine, who will -- if the buzz proves correct -- be nominated for
an Oscar for his performance. Kudos should also go to director Philip
Noyce and screenwriter Christopher Hampton -- who also wrote the
screenplay for “Dangerous Liaisons” -- as they slowly and subtly
create a sense of intrigue surrounding Frasier’s character Pyle.
We see contrasts and metaphors throughout the movie, but they are
never blatantly obvious or crammed down our throat, as would happen
in an inferior film. We see the beauty of Vietnam juxtaposed against
the carnage of the war; the aging, sophisticated, jaded Brit set
against the young, handsome, idealistic American.
I really liked how throughout the film you can sense that they
both respect and like each other and that they try to remain friends,
even amid the worst moments between them.
The film also somewhat mirrors the American experience in Vietnam.
Like Pyle’s beliefs about Phuong and her relationship with Fowler, we
may have idealistically gone to war to “save” the Vietnamese people
(from communism), but we went in blindly, believing naively in our
ideology and, ultimately, not knowing the pain we would endure nor
that which we would cause.
Rated R for images of violence and language, on the Brunette movie
rating scale of “Pay Full Price,” “Bargain Matinee,” “Video Rental,”
or “Wait for Cable,” I give “The Quiet American” a rarely given and
not often seen rating of “Pay Full Price.”
* RICHARD BRUNETTE is a 39-year-old recreation supervisor for the
city of Costa Mesa.
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