"It's complicated"
It's exceedingly good to see Luis Guzmán looking so
vibrantly out of place in Kevin Reynolds' The Count
of Monte Cristo. Guzmán plays a pirate named
Jacopo who is about to be killed by his fellows, for
some infraction of the pirate code. Just at this
moment (which takes place in the during the early 19th
century, near France), the film's ostensible hero,
Edmond Dantes (Jim Caviezel, looking almost as
perplexed as he did in Angel Eyes), comes
washing up on the pirate island's shore and gets into
his own scuffle with them. Offered the chance to kill
Jacopo in a fight or be killed himself, Edmond says
okay. And then, so gallant is Edmond that when he has
the chance to finish off his opponent, he does not.
This is apparently fine with the rest of the pirates,
as the film quickly moves on to some other scene, with
Jacopo ensconced as Edmond's grateful
servant-for-life.
Indeed, Jacopo proves himself a very worthy servant,
but more importantly, he hovers around the edges of
the rest of The Count of Monte Cristo's
preposterous plot, representing an almost mischievous,
slightly skewed perspective on the upper class folly
going on before him. And if there's anything
screenwriter Jay Wolpert's overheated adaptation of
Alexandre Dumas' classic tale, it's a mischievous,
slightly skewed perspective. Unfortunately, Guzmán's
Jacopo doesn't make his appearance until almost
halfway through the movie, which means that there's a
lot of set-up to get to the profound insight he
offers.
The story of Edmond's journey that pirate island is
long and tragic (the film runs two and a half hours).
He first appears as a generally happy, if "common,"
fellow in Marseilles, in love with the perfect
upper-class girl, Mercedes (Dagmara Dominiczyk), and
believing that all is hunky dory between himself and
flamboyant and extremely competitive fop of a best
friend, Fernand Mondego (Guy Pearce). What Edmond
doesn't know is that Fernand, also upper class and
lusting after Mercedes, resents the heck out of him.
The friends both work for a shipping company, and
after an unexpected detour to Elba, where Edmond
stupidly agrees to deliver a letter for the exiled
Napoleon, they return home to learn that their
employer is promoting Edmond and essentially dissing
Fernand. When he sees Edmond celebrating his good
fortune with a little open-air sex with Mercedes, you
can almost see the steam coming out of Fernand's ears:
What to do? What to do!?
Well, he comes up with a doozy of a scheme to ruin
poor Edmond bigtime, enlisting the help of an
unpleasant local magistrate, Villefort (James Frain),
to have Edmond arrested for treason. As the uniforms
drag him off, Edmond is naturally horrified: "Why?
Why?" he beseeches Fernand, who replies curtly, "It's
complicated... because you're the son of a clerk and
I'm not supposed to want to be you!" Aha! The
complications of such ardor are evidently quite beyond
Edmond, whose mopey, bedraggled demeanor only makes
you sympathetic with the infinitely more charismatic
Fernand's view of things. Within minutes, it seems,
Edmond is whisked off to prison on the ominously named
Isle d'If, forever, while Villefort tells and Mercedes
and her family that he has been executed.
Though he might count himself fortunate that he's not
stuck in an Iron Mask, things do look mighty grim for
Edmond. He's locked in a dank cell, gets one plate of
some foul-looking goop a day, and his psycho warden
(Michael Wincott) decides to help him keep track of
time by whipping him once a year, on the anniversary
of his arrival. But lo, some years into his new life,
during which he focuses solely on the vengeance he
will wreak on Fernand if he ever escapes, Edmond
receives an unexpected visitor to his cell. A fellow
prisoner and priest named Faria (Richard Harris, who
is the only actor here, other than Guzmán, who visibly
understand that this whole business is ridiculous)
pops up through the floor: "Forgive my intrusion!"
Faria has mistaken the location as the "outside" he's
trying to reach by digging (and he has been digging
for five years). In exchange for some help with this
project (which he calculates they can finish together
in eight years), Faria "offers knowledge," that is, he
teaches Edmond history, philosophy, economic theory, a
s well as how to read and swashbuckle. Bonding and
digging montages ensue.
When the old man inevitably dies, he bequeaths unto
Edmond a map leading to an unspeakably humungous
treasure. And when Edmond inevitably does escape, he
hooks up with Jacopo, who helps him carry off this
weighty bounty and carry out his revenge. When they
get to Marseilles, Edmond pretends to be the Count of
Monte Cristo, and incredibly, no one sees through this
ruse, though Mercedes has an inkling that he's her
long-lost beau when she realizes he is twisting his
hair in the nervous way that Edmond used to (this
realization is underlined, of course, by the
obligatory close-up). Then again, it appears that
prison and torture have agreed with Edmond, because
everyone else in the film has aged pretty badly by now
-- some 15 years after his removal -- with gray hair
and prosthetically wrinkled faces, while he remains
fit and attractive, with youthful visage and
remarkably pearly white teeth.
There's one more bit of bad news for Edmond/the
Count: not only has his father hanged himself in
distress and shame, but that perfect girl Mercedes has
up and married his the dastardly Fernand. Not to
mention that she also has a 15-yearold son who appears
to be following in Fernand's low-down footsteps. At
this point, Edmond and Jacopo initiate the Vengeance
Plot, making the "Count" the talk of the town (he
arrives in a hot air balloon, accompanied by
fireworks, throws lavish parties, etc.), so that he
can surreptitiously engineer a major embarrassment and
wreck Fernand's life.
Even if you haven't read the novel, or seen 15+ other
films that have been made from it, you can easily
guess where The Count of Monte Cristo is
headed. Aside from its sheer spectacle -- shot by
Andrew Dunn, it is a sumptuous, if slow-moving,
business -- the primary reason to see it is that it
lets my boy Luis wear gold knickers. He makes the most
of the opportunity.