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With Northfork,
Mark and Michael Polish have created an ambitious fable encompassing the American Dream
and Christian mythologies to explore the broader, universal theme of transition--the
constant condition of unending change that is inherent in the human experience and the
ultimate transition, death.
In mid-20th century Montana, the town of Northfork has been
"dammed/damned"--a dam has been built to generate hydroelectric power and, as a
result, Northfork will be inundated by the trapped waters. The politicians promise
progress, but progress forces change. The town has been largely evacuated; graves in the
cemetery have been dug up to relocate remains to higher ground--even the dead are subject
to change.
The story centers on the efforts of a team of men, all dressed
identically, all driving black Fords, headed by Walter O'Brien (James Woods), charged with
evacuating the handful of holdouts who remain in the town as the flood waters rise. The
local priest, Father Harlan (Nick Nolte), preaches to the remaining few in his
congregation,"We will gain the courage to move to a higher ground," one of many
double-edged lines and puns that recur in the screenplay.
Harlan is caring for a dying orphan, Irwin (Duel Farnes), who
fantasizes that he is an angel trying to convince a group of angels that he is one of
them. That highly eccentric group consists of Cup of Tea (Robin Sachs), an effete and
cynical Englishman; Happy (Anthony Edwards), handless and near-blind, always wearing an
oculist's multi-lensed instrument and seeking the facts; Cod (Ben Foster), a mute
cowboy; and Flower Hercules (Darryl Hannah), androgynous, childless, and most motivated to
accept Irwin.
Among the holdouts are the Youngs, a couple in the heat of
passion; Mr. Stalling, who has built an ark and supplied himself with two wives; and
Jigger, who sits on his porch firing his rifle at the evacuators. Stalling tells O'Brien,
"We're waiting for a sign from God." But the larger question is posed as to
whether such signs would be recognized if and when they occur.
On a tiny budget (under $2 million) and in only 24 days of shooting,
the Polish brothers have achieved a stunningly handsome look for their film, using a
washed out palette, the Montana landscape, a handful of stark prairie buildings, and their
own fecund imaginations. A continuing flow of imagery (coffins, turbines, angel wings,
feathers, buffalo) is seamlessly knit into alternately grounded and surrealistic episodes,
carried dramatically by the knowledge of the coming flood. Canny use of sound (bubbling
water, a whistling teakettle, footsteps in a tunnel, explosions) and an elegant score by
Stuart Matthewman enhance both the drama and the eerie atmosphere.
Northfork, unlike the Polish brothers superb and underseen
first film, Twin Falls, Idaho, does not
build fully realized characterizations that engage the emotions. In that, it is a less
effective film. On the other hand, it offers exquisite artistry in its visuals and relies
on the complexity of its ideas and incidents to engage the mind in an intellectual
challenge that sustains interest throughout. Like poetry, it is condensed, rich in
suggestions, ambiguities, and deliberately unanswered questions.
- Arthur Lazere