Movie Review #25
The Quiet American (2002)
Directed by Phillip Noyce
Screenplay by Christopher Hampton and Robert Schenkkan
Based on the novel by Graham Greene
Rating: 7.25/10.00 or *** (out of 4)
Saigon. 1952. A tumultuous time in a growingly forbidden part of the world. The Communists and the French colonialists are fighting in the battlefields. Their bombs and missiles look eerily like fireworks in the darkened nighttime sky. The sounds are both disturbing and strangely normal. The Vietnamese go about their lives with these events in the background. Many of their lives are fine if the war does not approach them. If it remains in the battlefields and not on the streets.
This is the setting but not the substance of The Quiet American, an interesting and fascinatingly effective motion picture directed by Phillip Noyce. The film begins with a scene at a local Saigon harbor, with small boats stationary on fairly calm water. We see the fireworks of battle in the background and hear the soothingly calm and subtly desperate voice of Michael Caine's in the background. It's the most effective scene in the movie. It quickly and efficiently sets the movie up. We find out what the film is about and what the surroundings of the story really are. The film is about a love triangle; the surrounding is a war-torn but still tension-building Vietnam.
Michael Caine plays Thomas Fowler, a man who has seen most of his life but has found a freshness with Phuong (Do Thi Hai Yen), a much younger dance-hall girl. Fowler is in love with her, and Phuong appreciates the benefits she gets out of it. The relationship is mutual, but the feelings are not perfectly compatible. It's a perfect set-up for a third person to enter the couple's lives and change everything. Alden Pyle (Brendan Fraser) does so. Pyle is an American medical worker (at least that is how he introduces himself), a young face for Phuong. Pyle can offer one thing that Fowler cannot: marriage. Fowler is tied up in a marriage back in England. Fowler tries desperately to end the marriage, but his results remain futile. This leads Phuong to be swayed toward Pyle.
Fowler, an English newspaper correspondent, is told to come home. Fowler tries everything to prevent this from occurring. His one solid mode of living is Phuong. Fowler is a desperate man who has little hope in a world that seems destined for destruction. His love for Phuong is his only form of hope. To lose this, he says, "would be the beginning of death." And we do nothing but believe. Fowler is a no-doer. He observes, but he does not act. He believes in silence that he can do nothing but report on the world around him. His power is only in his ability to see and to write, not in his ability to act.
Pyle, meanwhile, is a man not as simple as he may seem to appear. The movie makes this pretty obvious right from the start. We note that he has a suspicious relationship with General The (pronounced tay), played by Quang Hai. General The is financially well-supported and has an ever-increasing number of followers. We soon learn of The's methods: His faction conducts terrorist acts on Vietnamese citizens; the blame is later put on Communists. The goal is international support and sympathy for his faction. The cost is what we see in the film. The "surprise" is what this cost involves. We learn that Pyle is one of this faction's supporters. Pyle, indeed, is an American CIA agent sent to Vietnam to conduct these terrorist acts in the hopes of eradicating Communism.
Fowler also learns of this while observing one such act. And here we are presented with the movie's brilliance. It uses the love triangle it presents and the surrounding tension of Vietnam to ask the audience a rather simple question: Are the resulting actions by Fowler in response to jealousy of Pyle's influence over and relationship with Phuong? Or are they the result of ethical standards he has? The question is all the more powerful since we are aware that his lifestyle before this time was that of observation, not action.
The film does not answer the question, and it does not have to. The question is only for us to consider, not for us to conclude upon. It makes for a rather involving last half hour of the film. We know what will happen (since the first ten minutes of the film show the results to us), but now we know the feelings charging it. And it is this power that Noyce shows with unflinching direction. Yet, the movie seems undercharged. Noyce refuses to go overboard, and the results are much more satisfying than they could have been.
There are scenes of uncommon power in this movie. Any interaction between Fraser and Caine is beautifully charged. Pyle and Fowler are enemies and friends. They both have the goal of Phuong's love in hand, and they vie each other for it. But at the same time, they relate to each other because of it. Added to this is the fact that each one is intrigued immensely by the other. Fowler says in voiceover in one scene that he did not expect to see Pyle on a particular day, but furthermore, he did not expect to be happy to see Pyle that day. This is a profound observation. Fowler and Pyle are not really enemies, but they are reminders to each other. These reminders benefit each of them.
The terrorist act in the streets of Saigon has an epic feel surrounding it. It is blatantly melodramatic, but it is also shown with a unique sense of sadness. We see terror in its truest form: horrible, bloody, and nondiscriminant. The streets are now the settings of the battlefield. No one is safe anymore.
However, sometimes style gets in the way of substance. Take a scene in which Pyle and Fowler discuss their love for Phuong. They are underground as the battle they are surrounded by gets ever closer and ever noisier. The camerawork and the music give the scene an overly chaotic feel. This is a bad use of melodrama for a well-intentioned idea. While war is on their doorsteps, all Pyle and Fowler think and talk about is Phuong. But the scene is ultimately annoying and badly presented.
I also have a slight problem with the climax of the film. It seemed to be presented in a thriller type fashion. This does not fit the style of the film, which is slow and subtle. We know what happens at the end of this scene anyway since the results of it are shown in the first part of the film. To present this scene in an adrenaline-pump style does not seem appropriate to me.
Acting, however, is nearly flawless. Caine's performance is mesmerizing. He plays Fowler with a perfect mixture of desperation and subtlety. He is fixated with Phuong, and his actions and appearance show it. Fraser, meanwhile, holds his own as Pyle, a man with an evil method of a good intention. Fraser uses his stereotype of eager and simplistic character-acting to his advantage. Do Thi Hai Yen plays Phuong as a silent but slightly authoritative woman who is aware of the power she has over the two men. She remains innocent in her methods and actions, however. Do Thi Hai Yen makes Phuong appealing.
Noyce has made a good film here. The Quiet American is subtle in its power to affect an audience. It holds a political statement toward America's suspect foreign policy in Vietnam, but it does not emphasize it as the film remains true to its most important feature: the love story. Although there are several instances when Noyce's style gets in the way of the unfolding tale, the powerful statements the film makes ultimately make this a film that is immensely engrossing and riveting.