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Blood Simple (1984)
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The reissue of Joel Coens and Ethan Coens 1984 Blood Simple contains a brief tongue-in-cheek prologue
in which a tweedy Clifton Fadiman clone puts aside a leather-bound tome long enough to
extol the merits of "this exquisite masterpiece." (Its the filmed
equivalent of the put-on prefaces that accompany published versions of the Coens
screenplays.) But what "Mortimer Young" doesnt mention is how offbeat the
movie seemed at the time of its debut, or how it thwarted moviegoers whod become
addicted to rooting for their protagonists. Blood Simple represented a different
breed of filmmaking: ironic, seemingly indifferent to the welfare of its characters, and
extravagantly aware of itself as a movie. Even some of its biggest fans had a hard time
articulating what they liked about the film because its intentions couldnt be
confirmed until the Coens had made another picture or two.
Today its easy to enjoy Blood Simple as something much
simpler: film noir, Texas Style. Ceiling fans have replaced the Venetian
blinds and the villain has exchanged his fedora for a straw cattlemans hat. The plot
revolves around an adulterous affair between Ray (John Getz), a no-account bartender, and
Abby (Frances McDormand), his boss wife. When Abbys husband, Marty (Dan
Hedaya), learns of the affair, his cancerous anger eats through every part of his
personality until he finally resorts to hiring a primitively venal private detective,
Loren Visser (M. Emmet Walsh), to murder the couple. Visser is a rattlesnake disguised as
a vulgar bumpkin, and the reptile in him comes fully alive at the prospect of earning ten
thousand dollars. But why should he commit two murders when one will suffice? (Walsh, in
the performance of his career, so expertly oozes the reek of moral decay that twice in the
movie flies show up to walk across his face.) The detective doublecrosses Marty he
puts a bullet into him and then drawls at his body, "You look stoo-pid
now" but he mistakenly leaves evidence behind that would connect him to the
crime. His attempts to remedy the situation, coupled with Rays misinterpretation
when he stumbles upon the crime scene (he assumes that Abby killed her husband), lead to a
roundelay of farcical misunderstandings that bear murderous implications for everyone
involved.
The Coens trademark aloofness works to perfection in Blood
Simple because only the audience has a birds eye view of the action. Were
privy to information thats withheld from Abby and Ray specifically, that
Vissers need to tie up his loose ends has put them in harms way and
were forced to watch as they draw disastrously wrong conclusions at every step of
the proceedings. (Their haplessness is epitomized by Rays panicked attempt to mop up
a pool of blood with his plastic windbreaker.) Because they dont even know that
Visser exists, Abby and Ray can only suspect each other when things go awry, and as they
grow ever more alienated from each other, the movie plays off our familiarity with noir
conventions, and perhaps off our memories of our own soured romances.
Blood Simple is at its best when it teases our state of mind
with a variety of twilight effects. Its nearly silent for extended stretches (the
scene in which Ray disposes of a body in a farm field lasts a full ten minutes without a
word of spoken dialogue), while Carter Burwells spare piano score lends a lunar
quality to the movies fluid transitions. Through it all Barry Sonnenfelds
photography guides you through the spectral debris thats sprinkled throughout the
movie: a string of dead fish flopped across a tabletop, some plumbing fixtures glistening
under beads of icy condensation, a VW beetle that has a malevolently watchful presence.
Even the crease in a dead mans trousers seems invested with the power of speech.
The Coens have streamlined Blood Simple for this re-release,
deleting a couple snippets of dialogue whose absence is noticeable only because the cuts
marking their removal are surprisingly abrupt. But virtually everything memorable in the
film remains intact, including some things such as the pointlessly flamboyant shot
that glides along the bar and over a sleeping barflys head, or the close-up of Marty
barfing towards the camera lens that it could have profited by losing. A couple of
new musical cues have been added and a Temptations song has been restored to the end
credits. Most importantly, the movie has been given a new digital stereo mix so that its
carefully worked out sound effects the crackling of a bug-lamp at the climax of an
important speech, the tip of a shovel rasping over an asphalt highway can work
their full unsettling magic.
Blood Simple plays almost exactly as it did in 1984, for better and
for worse. Theres not much going on beneath its surface, and it doesnt bear
comparison to great thrillers like The
Third Man or Rear Window.
Yet its festering, eerie atmosphere is almost comically engrossing while youre
watching it, and it runs absolute circles around assembly-line jobs like Fatal Attraction and The Fugitive. Its hair-raising set pieces the
burial scene, the grisly cat-and-mouse pursuit at the end of the picture have the
delicious storyboard clarity of Hitchcocks great sequences, and time hasnt
diminished the queasy shocks one gets from the movies jolts of violence. Its
fitting that Blood Simple closes with the sound of a sardonic cackle, for the
picture served notice that American cinema was about to get a boost from two formidable
yet highly prankish talents. The Coen brothers had arrived.
- Tom Block