+ another review of The Hurricane by Josh Jones
There's a moment partway through The Hurricane that may cause you to catch your breath. It's a cramped shot, as are most of those showing Ruben Hurricane Carter (Denzel Washington) in his New Jersey State Prison cell. The camera frames his face and upper body in deep shadow as he reads a letter from a new correspondent, a boy who's been moved by the inmate's autobiography, which details his unjust incarceration. As Ruben reads the letter, you notice a photograph that he has taped to his cell wall, just above his shoulder. It's the famous image of Malcolm X, kneeling in prayer in the Middle East.
The shot is striking because it so clearly juxtaposes two
remarkable black historical figures, both renowned for being
persecuted and resilient. It's perhaps more striking, however,
because it shows two incredible roles for Denzel Washington. The
irony is that, while Washington was roundly praised for his
performance as Malcolm, there was no way in hell that he would
have ever been awarded mainstream prizes, like the Oscar, for it,
as it was a gigantically ambitious, wild-ass movie directed by a
loud-mouthed, incredibly talented black director, Spike Lee. That
Malcolm was a larger than life angry black man, not to mention
stubborn, politically astute, and brilliant, surely didn't make
Academy type people feel any easier about the film, the
character, the filmmakers, or the points they might have been
making.
So now, just a few years later, Washington is appearing as
another angry black man who is also legendary, articulate, and
honorable. Only this time, he's playing a character who turns his
attitudes about race and injustice around, who is actually
saved by a group of white people. His historical and
metaphorical anger is ameliorated, in other words, by a plot that
makes it all right to like nice white folks. Jewison's film makes
Ruben a much less alarming black man than Lee's Malcolm. It's
not a little ironic, either, that Jewison was the man who
directed A Soldier's Story, the film that made Denzel a movie
star, or that he was one of several white directors scheduled and
unscheduled, over many years, to direct Malcolm X. At the time,
Lee argued specifically that a white man could not do the story
justice.
The Hurricane's Ruben Carter is hardly as volatile as the
cinematic Malcolm. This despite the fact that there are any
number of reasons for him to be furious, and the movie doesn't
skimp on them. Most of its scenes take place in Ruben's various
cells or during the brief moments of his release, when he's
really only waiting to be thrown back inside (punctuated by
repeated images of large, loud prison doors and gates closing).
And the movie closes at the point when Ruben, standing before a
crusty federal appeals judge (Rod Stieger), learns that, after
spending 22 years in prison for a triple homicide he did not
commit, he will be set free. It's as if, once the character no
longer behind bars, the story is complete, or has lost its
dramatic capacities, or has run out of steam.
This character is, of course, based on a real life person, a 1966
welterweight boxing champion named The Hurricane because of his
fury and beauty in the ring, his resemblance to a "natural
force." It's appropriate that the movie begins in the state
penitentiary where Ruben spent so much of his life, just as his
cell is about to be "tossed" (searched). He's all charged up,
prepared to fight off the intruders with all his skills and
instincts. He's eventually calmed by a friendly guard (Clancy
Brown), and the manuscript is rescued. It also makes sense that
the film begins with a conflict about Ruben's book, The 16th
Round, which gives him a voice (which, in real life, won real
responses from 60s celebrity activists interested in freeing
him). Throughout, the film's prison scenes are awful, in
particular, one sequence where he's in solitary, and Washington
in effect acts three characters, three versions of Ruben,
frightened and humbled, aggressive and enraged, and the self
caught between them, thoughtful but suspicious of his own
beliefs, unable to make sense of this incredible situation.
It's incredible but all too true and even mundane for so many
minority prisoners in the U.S. that he's in jail for something
he didn't do, that lawyers and judges for years ignore the
obviously inconsistent evidence against him in the three murders
case. But The Hurricane means to persuade, not alienate, its
viewers It's not about to leave you feeling as righteously and
completely incensed as Ruben Carter felt during his life, or as
Washington conveys. And so, the movie backs off, and constructs a
singular and cartoonish villain, a Lieutenant Della Pesca (Dan
Hedaya, looking even uglier than usual, especially when they
layer on the old-man makeup for later scenes). It's not clear
why Della Pesca despises Ruben from the time he is a child
so much that he uses nefarious means to frame him for that triple
homicide. It is clear that Della Pesca is a metaphor for
institutional and irrational racism (which you might intuit from
the film's use of many background tv images of police brutality
against black people and Civil Rights workers). But he's a clunky
metaphor, unconvincing as a character and too easy for audience
members to dismiss as unreal.
Rather, viewers are allowed to identify with the well-intentioned
(and eventually successful: otherwise there would be no story to
tell) do-gooders. They are led by Lesra (Vicellous Shannon),
black and Brooklyn-born, now living in Toronto with a threesome
he calls "the Canadians," Terry (John Hannah), Lisa (Deborah
Unger), and Sam (Liev Schreiber), who make their living by
"fixing up" old houses. So well-intentioned are these white
people, that they have rescued Lesra from his illiterate life,
brought him home, and prepared him to apply to college. His
discovery of Ruben's book at a used book sale (some ten years
after its initial publication, as its author continues to
languish in prison) makes a dramatic connection. As Lesra reads,
his own background is intercut with Ruben's, and it becomes clear
that they are fated to come together, to help and cherish one
another in ways that no one else has been able or inclined.
The love story between Ruben and Lesra is beautiful and tactfully
told how many mainstream films do you know that might show a
romance (wholly asexual as it is), between two black men? but
the movie can't leave it alone. Rather, it frames and reframes
their intimacy with images of the white folks. Surely, the "true
story" fell out something like this: after coming to know
Hurricane, the three Canadians and Lesra moved to New Jersey and
devoted their time and energies to digging up the old corrupt
evidence and making a case strong enough to go before that
federal appeals court and win.
But to shape this story so neatly, the screenplay by Armyan
Bernstein
and Dan Gordon, based on Lazarus and The Hurricane by Sam Chaiton and
Terry Swinton (two of the Canadians), and Carter's own autobiography
reduces complications and short-shrifts characters like Della Pesca and
Ruben's wife, Mae Thelma (Debbi Morgan), who appears for just enough
scenes to be upset and supportive (and to give Ruben a son), and is
then
disappeared, to make emotional room for Ruben's new "family." All this
coherence and rearrangement make The Hurricane disturbing. For all
the
courage and vitality it grants its protagonist, it's not a brave film.