MVD Marquee Collection: Edmond (2005) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of MVD Visual

Actor William H. Macy and playwright/screenwriter/director David Mamet go way back as far as teaming up together for some of the most provocative and incendiary stage plays written and performed in the history of live theater.  Beginning with their first collaboration in the 1991 crime drama Homicide to the sexual harassment drama Oleanna in 1994 and again in 2004 with the human trafficking thriller Spartan, Macy and Mamet formed a bold, confident and daring actor-director team of sorts and took audiences on stage and in film through some dark and morally complex places that posed more uncomfortable questions than it answered. 

 
Which brings us to Mamet’s 1982 one-act play Edmond, a kind of lost weekend downward spiral story involving a white-collar worker named Edmond Burke in New York City.  After a chance meeting with a fortune teller, Edmond slips into existential crisis, leaves his wife and finds himself on an increasingly self-destructive odyssey through the underbelly of the city that never sleeps.  Brushing alongside greedy prostitutes, violent pimps and street conmen, the titular character is eventually beaten and left for dead but not before buying a knife and proceeding to commit racist hate crimes against African American citizens.  Exhilarated by his newfound brush with violence, he picks up a waitress named Glenna for a one-night stand which goes horribly awry, sending the titular antihero further down the spiral with the looming threat of incarceration and some dogged measure of redemption however ugly.
 
An existential horror story rife with racism, violence and murder, in stage play form the episodic journey consisted of twenty-three disparate short scenes with the cast members taking on multiple roles throughout the narrative.  Hard on the eyes and especially the ears with brutal ethnic slurs, the play like Oleanna was a confrontational exercise in experimental thrust theater designed to unseat the audience from their comfort zones.  Understandably, the racial content of the piece, however critically acclaimed, made it difficult for college campuses to stage the work.  As far as any kind of film adaptation goes, Edmond went unmade onscreen for decades despite Mamet’s own ascension into film directing as well as screenwriting for other directors.

 
Enter cult horror filmmaker, theater director, screenwriter and playwright Stuart Gordon who with Brian Yuzna helped conjure up some of the most memorable adaptations of H.P. Lovecraft the silver screen has seen from Re-Animator to From Beyond and Dagon to delivering two of Empire Pictures’ most memorable offerings with Dolls and Robot Jox.  Usually effects heavy and boundary pushing, the director like other horror contemporaries David Cronenberg and John Carpenter worked almost exclusively within the horror subgenre.  In other words, a staple of specifically 1980s horror.  But near the end of the horror director’s career on his very last two projects, Gordon sought to get back in touch with his Organic Theater Company roots and with David Mamet’s screen treatment of his own play the two teamed up for what would be the fourth screen collaboration of Mamet and his favorite actor William H. Macy. 
 
Edmond as a film finds William H. Macy in the role of Edmond Burke as he episodically encounters everyone from recurring Mamet collaborator Joe Mantegna, a fortune teller played by David Lynch regular Frances Bay, strippers played by Denise Richards, Bai Ling, Debi Mazar and Mena Suvari in sneaky cameos including but not limited to Re-Animator star Jeffrey Combs as a desk clerk.  Where the film starts to boil down centers around a chance encounter with a waitress studying theater played by Julia Stiles and later a prisoner played by Bokeem Woodbine who kind of brings the saga full circle for our racist antihero in existential crisis. 
 
Visually the film looks fine and has the feel of a night life thriller ala Martin Scorsese’s After Hours, shot handsomely by But I’m a Cheerleader cinematographer Denis Maloney and the jazzy soundtrack by Bobby Johnston suits the urban city setting very well.  Co-producer Lionel Mark Smith who played the role of a thuggish pimp in the stage play reprises his role here in arguably the film’s most difficult scene which reportedly caught the unwanted ear of Jamie Foxx who was shooting a television pilot nearby.  Despite being an ensemble piece with many fleeting characters coming in and out of the story, Edmond primarily rests on the shoulders of its sociopathic protagonist played brilliantly by William H. Macy who won the Best Actor award at the 2006 Mar del Plata Film Festival. 
 
Given a miniscule limited theatrical run by First Independent Pictures before languishing on the shelves of Blockbuster Video straight-to-video rental sections, Edmond the film didn’t quite take off with moviegoers in the same way it did on stage.  William H. Macy is great in the piece and knows how to work with Mamet while Stuart Gordon gets back in touch with his theatrical background but while the play implicated the spectator in some way, on film it plays as a character study where we can divorce ourselves somewhat from the performances analytically.  The same can be said of how Oleanna worked on stage compared to how it played in cinematic form. 

 
Thankfully now in a new blu-ray special edition from the MVD Marquee Collection including but not limited to two audio commentaries by David Mamet and Stuart Gordon alongside producer Lionel Mark Smith, deleted scenes and a vintage making-of press kit, cult filmgoers interested in all things Mamet related as well as horror fans keen on seeing Gordon working outside of his comfort zone now have a chance to assess this still thorny and blistering descent into Hell for themselves.  Every bit as potent and discomforting now as it was in 2005, Edmond isn’t necessarily the definitive Macy-Mamet collaboration but it does give the viewer with difficult provocations to ponder long after the end credits roll.  If nothing else you have to hand it to Macy for so fearlessly bringing to life such a complete monster to the silver screen.

--Andrew Kotwicki