The New Classics - Eastern Promises
Tuesday, April 30, 2019 at 3:00PM
Michael C. in David Cronenberg, Eastern Promises, Oscars (07), The New Classics

Michael Cusumano here to argue a case for the the best fight scene of the last two decades.

The Scene: The Sauna Fight
It’s no surprise that just about every discussion of the sauna fight from Eastern Promises dwells on the bare skin. If the King of Middle Earth strips down to his tattoos it’s gonna dominate the conversation.

And it’s not only gawking. It’s thematically on point. This scene uses nakedness to make you feel a character’s vulnerability as effectively as any film since Psycho, plus all the skin on display reflects the film’s obsession with bodies -- bodies as currency and bodies defaced and disfigured... 

All that said, Cronenberg had to do more than display a zero-body fat Viggo Mortensen to deliver the pinnacle of 21st century fight scenes. The scene's brilliance is in the way it makes the viewer feel as exposed as Nikolai. Just as with musical numbers, fight scenes often cue the audience that it is entering a heightened reality where genuine danger is absent. Cronenberg eliminates these cues.

The simplest comfort Cronenberg denies the viewer is music. Up until this scene Howard Shore’s rich score has permeated the film. During the fight it goes silent putting the audience in the midst of every grunt, slice, and crunch. Likewise, the editing barely allows the audience a breath before plunging into the carnage. Just two fleeting shots, a few frames each, where Nikolai registers a fully dressed man in a sauna. This puts us off our balance, skipping the expected beats of Nikolai sensing danger. The bloodshed is underway before we’ve had a chance to brace ourselves. 

All these choices are effective, but what really makes this sequence sing is how it never quite triggers our suspension of disbelief, despite stretching for over three minutes. No action is so polished as too feel choreographed. Not a single punch, cut, or fall is absorbed without registering the cost. Characters grow tired. They grow desperate. The most improbable moment in the whole melee is when Viggo disarms a knife-wielding goon with a kick and Cronenberg is sure to show the whole action in a medium shot with no cuts, so we have no cause to doubt.

Throughout the fight the shooting and cutting places a premium on clarity, mostly medium or full body shots, and when it goes in for a close-up it’s to emphasize a detail, not to obscure the action. Camera moves are smooth and confident, even though shaky-cam was all the rage at the time (Eastern Promises shared multiplexes with The Bourne Ultimatum). Nothing is there to call attention to itself. Even the stunning final shot of a brutalized Nikolai dragging himself across the sauna floor for over a minute isn’t there to showboat with a long take, but to set the viewer up for its brutal capper. We expect trickery in edits so when the shot doesn’t cut away, we buy the final gut-churning stab in a way we rarely do with movie violence. 

Screenwriter Steven Knight lays the groundwork for the scene so elegantly we are able to follow the internal strategy every bit as much as the external action. Two men armed with knives against a naked man should be a massacre, but we know exactly why these killers underestimate Viggo’s fearsome gangster. Not only have they have been deceived to think Nikolia is Vincent Cassell’s much weaker character, but earlier in the film we’ve seen these killers play out a similar execution of an unsuspecting victim and it was over in seconds. Thanks to this level of care on the screenplay level, when Nikolai is able to beat the odds and eke out a victory we don’t take it as movie fakery but as the story tracking with what we know. On top of which, Nikolai’s quickness to action is clever foreshadowing for the film’s eventual big reveal as to his identity. This is not a man who drops his guard in any situation.

Though the violence is brutal and vividly realized, the gore is not all that extreme by Cronenbergian standards. No shot here is the equivalent, of, say, seeing the robber’s face blown open during the thwarted diner stick-up in A History of Violence. But there was no need to show men ripped open this time. The horror of one man’s total defenselessness was hair-raising enough. Where other fight scenes attepmpt to wow us with elaborate pageants of tough guy posturing that elevate human beings to near invincibility, the filmmaker who has always been fascinated by the frailty of the human body crafted a classic by respecting our limitations.   

Last week: Tilda Swinton gets her comeuppance in one of the great collapses of modern cinema

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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