In both 20th and
21st century movies, nature and culture are typically bifurcated, with the
urban representative of the culture binary usually constructed as dangerous,
suffocating, and many times deadly. Nature, on the hand, is primarily
represented as a haven, a pastoral escape from a deteriorating city environment
where all life seems to be threatened. Such a division is particularly striking
in film noir.
In Nicholas
Ray's film On Dangerous Ground (1952),
Detective Jim Wilson (Robert Ryan) finds solace in the rural hills, away from
the decaying noir urban setting he escapes. Wilson has become so embittered by
his dealings with the heartless criminals of the urban underworld that his
superiors notice his violent episodes of torture with his suspects. To curb his
violence, he is ordered out of the city to pursue a young girl’s killer in the
mountains up north.
In this idyllic pastoral setting, Wilson gains
self-awareness, with the help of Mary (Ida Lupino), the murderer’s blind
sister, and frees himself of his own rage. Nighttime urban shots in the film
maintain Wilson’s cynicism and desperation, but gradually, as his view of the
world changes, rural shots brighten, suggesting that Wilson’s own blindness
about himself has lifted. In film noir, the city is a dark, shadowy, and
dangerous underworld separate from a life-giving natural environment.
This same view
of the city as an oppressive space occurs outside the United States. The
cityscape of Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas’s Brazilian neo-noir Foreign Land (1996) resembles that of On Dangerous Ground. Foreign Land chronicles the union
between Paco (Fernando Alves Pinto), an aspiring actor living in Sao Paulo, and
the virtuous Alex (Fernanda Torres), who works as a waitress in Lisbon,
Portugal. Like Jim Wilson, Paco seeks to escape the decay of the city and the
empty seediness of his role there and find solace in San Sebastian, his dead
mother’s home. Paco feels trapped by forces beyond his control, in this case
literally trapped by the role of “mule” forced upon him after his mother’s
death.
Devoid of a
clear sense of self, Paco, like Wilson, frantically battles the city and its
underworld while searching for salvation outside the city and its corruption.
As in On Dangerous Ground, a virtuous
woman and pastoral solution to urban corruption contribute to the salvation
Paco seeks. Although Paco’s attempts to escape a broken city in wild nature
fails, both On Dangerous Ground and Foreign Land provide opportunities to
explore representations of nature in the cities where we live. They also
highlight the connections between cinema and both modern and postmodern
constructions of urban space.
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