One of the more unnerving modern psycho-thrillers. Fractured,
innovative and often quite brilliant, WHITE OF THE EYE was directed by
the late, underrated Donald Cammell, and remains among his finest work.
The Package
In a moviemaking career that spanned nearly thirty
years, the British genius Donald Cammell completed just four features.
The legendary PERFORMANCE (1970) was the first. It was co-directed with
Nicolas Roeg,
who went on to utilize many of the film’s innovative techniques in his
own auspicious filmography, even though most everyone connected with
PERFORMANCE attests that Cammell was the true driving force behind its
unique vision.
Cammell’s subsequent films included the science fiction
drama DEMON SEED (1977) and the dark comedy WILD SIDE (1995), which was
heavily recut against his wishes and allegedly led to his 1996 suicide
(for the record, a director’s cut was issued in 2000). WHITE OF EYE,
Cammell’s third film, was written by Cammell and his wife China, scored
by Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason, and filmed on location in Globe, Arizona.
Released in 1987 to widespread disinterest, WHITE OF THE EYE remains a
shamefully underrated film; as of early 2009 it’s never been released on
DVD in the US.
The Story
A series of brutal murders rocks the small Arizona town
where Joan White, a transplanted New Yorker, lives with her young
daughter and stereo salesman husband Paul. The police investigation into
the killings comes to focus on Paul, as his past is a decidedly
checkered one.
Joan suspects that Paul is cheating on her with a local
floozy. Her suspicions are confirmed when she follows Paul to the ho’s
house one day. Joan is so upset by Paul’s deception she refuses to
defend him when the police call her in to be questioned about his
doings.
The irony is that Paul IS in fact the killer, and
murdered the floozy in her house while Joan was outside. Back home Joan
discovers Paul’s handiwork in the form of a moldering corpse he’s
stashed under the bathroom floor. She’s understandably unnerved, and
Paul decides it’s time to put an end to it all. Joan doesn’t stand much
of a chance against his madness, but Mike, a mutual friend who’s known
the couple since the sixties, turns up to help her fight him off--but is
Mike’s intervention a case of too little, too late?
The Direction
Donald Cammell’s most famous and recognizable film
PERFORMANCE was made in the late sixties (though not released until
1970), and a distinctly counterculture atmosphere pervades WHITE OF THE
EYE, from the frequent references to Indian magic to the consistently
tripped-out visuals.
The film is heavily experimental in its construction,
with nearly every kind of visual quirk one can think of. Highlights
include much swooping steadicam camerawork and heavily expressionistic
editing by Terry Rawlings (replacing Cammell’s stock editor Frank
Mazzola). This makes for an extremely self-conscious viewing experience,
and far from the Hollywood model that decrees directorial technique be
invisible. But Cammell’s cinematic mastery, self-conscious or not, is
undeniable.
The performances by David Keith and Cathy Moriarty are
simply great, with both actors proving adept at conveying a sense of
mundane suburban reality and one of total madness. It’s that
juxtaposition that gives the film a creepy, unnerving edge far beyond
that of most standard thrillers.
Ultimately WHITE OF THE EYE is as much an artful
portrait of a crumbling relationship as it is an intense psycho
thriller--and in crafting this oddball mix Cammell does the seemingly
impossible: he actually succeeds in having it both ways.
Vital Statistics
WHITE OF THE EYE
Palisades Entertainment
Director: Donald Cammell
Producers: Cassian Elwes, Brad Wyman
Screenplay: Donald Cammell, China Cammell
(Based on a novel by Margaret Tracy)
Cinematography: Larry McConkey
Editing: Terry Rawlings
Cast: David Keith, Cathy Moriarty, Art Evans, Alan Rosenberg, Michael
Greene, Danielle Smith, Alberta Watson, William G, Schilling, David
Chow, Marc Hayashi, Mimi Lieber, Pamela Guest, Bob Zache