Comic book, cartoon, and now film
character Harley Quinn had a pair of hyenas as pets (though they didn’t make an
appearance in the Suicide Squad
movie; more’s the pity). They’re names
were Bud and Lou (get it?), and they obeyed her as dutifully as any lap dog
might. I thought they were a great
choice for her character, not least because I always had a thing for
hyenas. I don’t know what it is, but,
outside of having Bionic Bigfoot as a bestie, a hyena would be my second choice
(at least when I was a lad). Odd,
really, since there’s so much else about the animals that puts me off. They stink.
Sure, they have a jaw that can deliver five hundred pounds of pressure
per square inch, but they’re also scavengers; hardly the most auspicious of
traits. They always look like they have
mange (hey, maybe they do). Then there’s
that laugh, that shrill cry that would get on my nerves no end if I had to
listen to it daily. Come to think of it,
what the hell did I ever think made these beasts so attractive? Unironically, there is no hyena, literal or
figurative, in Cesare Canevari’s A Hyena in the Safe (aka Una Iena in Cassaforte). Considering all the other ultra-hip
flourishes in the film, I’m more than a little surprised by this decision.
Six criminals from all over
(Germany, Spain, France, Italy, England, and Tangier) converge on a
mansion. The group has reunited to open
the safe full of diamonds that they stole from a bank in Amsterdam, and each of
these louts has one of the six keys needed to open the safe. Tensions rise, and things get just a little
weird when one of them can’t find his key.
Canevari showcases a wicked hand for stylistic touches from start
to finish. As Klaus’ (Stan O’Gadwin) car pulls up to the
estate, his headlights start off in the distance and stop immediately in front
of the camera. He fires up a butt in
complete darkness, the only light the cherry on the cigarette. Carina (Karina
Kar) comes on the scene, and as she walks through the pitch-black night,
she is suddenly illuminated by Klaus’ headlights. Later, her legs take center frame in the
foreground, moving to reveal Anna (Maria
Luisa Geisberger), the ringleader.
Mirrors and such are used deftly throughout the film. Junkie Albert (Sandro Pizzochero) goes into withdrawal, and the camera angles and
cutting reflect his torment, twisting and turning like his insides. Everyone is dressed up like they’re going to
a carnival (though they never attend it, there is one going on out in the
streets, but I believe these people would have dressed the same no matter
what). The word “Fine” sits in a corner
of the screen for the last few minutes of the film, out of focus, a large, yellow
blob drawing your attention until it’s actually time for the credits to
roll. The thing about all of this is
that this movie is far longer on style than it is on sense. Sometimes this is okay, even fitting, but
here I just found myself being confused much of the time.
This disarray, I’m beginning to
think, is intentional, not incompetence.
First off, the film was made in the Psychedelic Sixties, when chaotic
editing and non sequiturs were a common practice in line with the youth
counterculture of the day (heavily influenced by the burgeoning drug culture of
which Albert has become a victim). As
such, this movie fits in nicely with any given episode of Laugh-In or The Banana Splits
or just about any other filmic or televised media that tried to be in touch
with the youngsters. I think you get the
idea.
Second off, the plot is a cat’s cradle of
internecine manipulations, with everyone trying to fuck over everyone else, and
duplicity is the byword of the day. Juan
(Ben Salvador) puts the moves on
Albert’s gal Jeanine (Cristina Gaioni),
who may or may not have lifted the key off Albert. Anna tries to align herself with Juan against
Steve (Dmitri Nabokov), then it
turns out she is really in cahoots with Steve.
And it goes on from there. The
point is, the way the film is constructed, we can rarely trust what we are
seeing because of the information skipped between scenes. We are left in the same state of doubt and
suspicion because we are adrift in the story the same as the film’s characters. This is only reinforced by the constant extreme
closeups of everyone’s eyes. They
accuse, they stare disaffectedly, they lust, they suspect, often all at the
same time. And we can trust none of
them. This leads to the CCTV that
watches all of the characters and through which we will observe a standoff
between two of them late in the runtime.
Third off, I think the film may
ultimately be a portrayal of one of the character’s descent into Hell and
madness. The film is loaded from stem to
stern with oddly sinister touches, and one of the film’s final beats has this particular
character go insane in a phantasmagoric onslaught of images. It’s the culmination of the queasy mélange of
incidents that begins with the avarice of all the characters and moves swiftly
downhill from there.
There is also an uneasy
playfulness in the film, most singularly captured by the Burt Bacharach-ian score that persistently pummels the audience’s
ears (like, say, a hyena’s cries?).
Think of the main title theme to the 1967 Casino Royale, and you have an idea (even though I quite like that
song, hearing it every couple of minutes becomes tedious). It distracts and even detracts from the
film’s innately tense premise.
Furthermore, there is the character of Callaghan (Otto Tinard), an odd, older man in a bowler hat who just sort of
meanders through the movie. At one
moment in the film, a character states in direct address, “We’ve arrived at the
last scene, and only you and I remain to act it out.” There is also a variety of deathtraps and
gadgetry that would be perfectly at home in a James Bond or a James Bond
knockoff film of the day, including, but not limited to, an electrified garage
door, a crypt that opens to reveal a lair of sorts, a room that floods with
water, etcetera. If anything, it’s these
elements that take the film down from the heights it could have achieved more than
its anarchic editing does. A Hyena in the Safe is one of those
films worth seeing more as an oddity than as any sort of required viewing.
MVT: The film has style to
spare, and it spares nothing in its style.
Make or Break: I think that
the second or third time you hear the film’s score, you’ll know whether or not
you can endure it for the film’s remainder.
Score: 6.5/10
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