GRAY, James (Dir.), “The Lost City of Z”, Mica
Entertainment/Northern Ireland Screen/Plan B Entertainment/Keep Your
Head/Madriver Pictures/Sierra Pictures, 2016.
The
story of Percy Fawcett’s mad dash to the Matto Grosso in the Amazon Basin is a
classic tale of adventure and exploration. Ernest Hemingway used to carry a
copy of the book with him and referred to it as one of the greatest adventure
tales of all time, even moreso because it is all true. It was only a matter of
time therefore, that someone would turn it into a movie. If only it hadn’t been
these people.
My
first exposure to Percy Fawcett (outside of some sparse gaming material) was
through a book entitled Brazilian
Adventure written in the 1930s by Peter Fleming. It recounts the efforts of
the author, along with some mates, to try and retrace the footsteps of Percy
Fawcett’s last expedition along the Amazon and possibly solve the mystery of
his disappearance. Despite a lot of serious difficulties, it reads a lot like something
that P.G. Wodehouse might take a swing at – like Bertie Wooster goes to Brazil.
However, in the background of that narrative is the looming spectre of Fawcett
and the quest upon which he was bent. Inevitably, I moved on to another book – Exploration Fawcett: Journey to the Lost
City of Z – which is the account of all Fawcett’s travels in South America,
edited by his youngest son Brian.
Like
Hemingway says, this is a mighty work, detailing years of painstaking
exploration and mapping across the Amazon River Basin. It’s unflinching in its
portrayals of the discomfort and the sheer back-breaking work of travelling
through the region and is full of many bizarre and wonderful encounters, from
eccentric murderers and landholders, to meetings with ghosts. (I posted a
review about this book several years ago now, so if you want to know more, you
can back-track.) You could say that any section of the work would contain
enough material to keep the average script-writer, or movie director, occupied
for a lifetime; however, this movie actually spends very little time in the
jungle.
This
treatment of Percy Fawcett focuses almost exclusively on Fawcett’s relationship
with the society back home in England. We see him struggling in the army to win
recognition for his efforts; we see him being passed over for various favours
from the aristocracy, due to the circumstances of his birth (his father
disgraced himself rather badly and placed his family beyond the pale); and we
see him being handed an onerous job by the Royal Geographic Society that would
see him sent out of the country and which no-one else thought was ‘exciting’
enough to consider taking on. This, of course, was the Bolivian mapping
expedition which introduced Fawcett to South America and which set him on
course for his mysterious disappearance.
All
of this is interesting background, but it plays rather too strongly throughout
the film. Various incidents where the ‘Old Boys’ Network’ prevents Fawcett from
making any kind of headway take place and these are as outrageous as they are
unfair, as you’d expect. They serve to underscore the desire that Fawcett must
have felt to leave so-called “civilisation” behind and get back to where the
ability to succeed depended upon a range of entirely different skills, not
dependent upon who you were, or how well you could stab someone in the back. As
it is, this celluloid Fawcett is rather un-fazed by all the bickering back
home: he seems far more interested in hoofing through the jungle than looking
after either his career or his family. When at home, he appears little more
than mildly irritated and bored.
The
jungle scenes themselves are somewhat lacking in anything that would serve to
promote any notion of there actually being
a Lost City somewhere out there. The motley crew find a pile of broken
potsherds and a face carved into a tree; Fawcett sees a bunch of… skulls? Carved
heads? It’s not clear, but then he has to turn back and temporarily abandon the
quest. Throughout Fawcett’s writings, there were encounters with natives and
traders who told him about the City and other clues that reinforced the possibility
that something was out there
somewhere; here, there’s very little of any merit to convince anyone, let alone
the viewer.
A
major feature of Fawcett’s travels was his desire to treat the local indigenes
well and to learn things from them. The encounters with the natives shown here
are colourful but they often don’t serve to push the narrative ahead. We have
moments where Fawcett disappears into the Bush with a group of bow-wielding Indians,
then he returns moments later with free access to the village, food and
supplies and a new compass heading. The sense is that the natives are merely a
colourful background before which the explorers move without impinging upon in
any significant way.
Muscularly-faced
Charlie Hunnam is a good pick to play Fawcett physically, but it feels like he’s
tired all the way through the movie; Robert Pattinson – almost unrecognisable
beneath layers of beard and spectacles – is sulky and world-weary as Fawcett’s
right-hand man; and Tom Holland – while barely in the film at all – is distracting
behind his moustache (I kept thinking, “Spidey has a lip-fairy!”). Added to
this, Sienna Miller, as Fawcett’s wife, is completely wasted. In fact, most of
the scenes in which she appears feel tacked-on and pointless: her constant
cavilling to be treated as her husband’s equal feel like they are intentionally
timely, homilies drawn from our current zeitgeist
rather than the circumstances of the source material. I don’t want to take
anything from the #MeToo movement (of which I approve), but this comes off almost
as a paid advertisement for it, more irritating than the most blatant product
placement in a blockbuster.
Political
hedging aside, this film feels as though it’s treading a line, following links
between narrative points in Fawcett’s life and desperately trying to miss nothing.
However, all of the episodes it so painstakingly screens are the bits that took
place in England, and very little of what took place in Amazonia, arguably the
bits that are described by Fawcett in his own words and which are far more
interesting than stuffy period piece club rooms, society galas and aristocratic
get-togethers. Add to this, the fact that the film kind of tapers off at the
point where Fawcett pere et fil
vanish into the jungle, borne away by natives, the whole thing just comes
across as fuzzy and poorly focussed. In short, this is a bloodless re-telling
of beside-the-point facts, deliberately missing all the really interesting parts of Fawcett’s life in favour of painting a “Downton Abbey”-esque backdrop to it. I
was left wondering what Werner Herzog could have done with it?
Three
Tentacled Horrors from me.