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CHRIS ALEXANDER's BLOOD-SPATTERED BLOG

NOMADS

In case you haven't noticed, I tend to gravitate towards cinema that isn't necessarily perfect but rather is flawed, fascinating and enigmatic; movies that reflect upon the mysteries of the human condition by shielding their truths in a thin sheen of bloody mess and abstract fantasy. Click to OrderI like films that are hazy, a bit out of focus, out of reach; pictures that you keep revisiting in order to unravel their secrets, even if they originally set out to offer very few . John McTiernan's 1986 head scratcher NOMADS is one such feature. This film is very close to my heart and baby...I aint even sure why.

Here's the sanguinary skinny...

During a long, graveyard shift in the ER, pretty young Doctor Flax (Lesley-Anne Down) encounters a beaten, bloody man (Pierce Brosnan) who initially appears to be a stark raving- mad transient. When the run down, sleep deprived MD leans in to check his pupils, the pair momentarily lock eyes before the wild-eyed lunatic bursts from his gurney, locks his jaw around her neck and whispers something in French before finally collapsing, dead.


Shaken, Dr. Flax is treated for her minor wounds and left to lie down and collect her bearings before, almost immediately, she begins to experience vivid hallucinations that send her into violent fits. As she soon discovers, the drooling madman that attacked her wasn't a madman at all but rather a famous Canadian anthropologist named Jean Charles Pommier, a man who after traveling the earth studying nomadic cultures had finally settled down at the request of his gorgeous wife (the persuasively beautiful Anna Maria Monticelli), into a cushy teaching gig in LA.


Apparently, shortly before his death, Pommier had been tracking a leather-clad gang of street punks (whose ranks include 80's rocker Adam Ant and cult film heroine Mary Woronov) drifting around his home. Turns out these homeless, rootless ruffians are in actuality a tribe of evil, nomadic spirits, the same breed of ancient, wandering souls he'd been obsessively following his whole life and are now hell-bent on driving him mad. The bite that Jean Charles gives Dr. Flax inexplicably causes her to aggressively relive – and we, the audience along with her – the memories leading up to his final sad state. Soon enough, she too becomes sucked into the Nomads' secret, clandestine, twilight world.


I saw NOMADS theatrically in 1986 ( I bought a ticket for the PG rated BACK TO THE FUTURE and snuck into the curiously R-rated film instead) and I can clearly remember the disorienting effect it had on me. See, NOMADS doesn't really make much sense, not in a linear, easily digestible way, anyway. The odd narrative structure - with its flashbacks within flashbacks, ever shifting points of view and lack of clear explanation as to the Nomads' history or true intent - made for a rather infuriating initial viewing experience. But I soon discovered that I could not stop thinking about it. I became obsessed with it. When it arrived on home video months later, I watched and re-watched it numerous times, trying in vain to decipher its clues and determine what made the movie resonate so much with me.

Today, I still can't properly articulate why I hold NOMADS in such high regard. I still don't really 'get it.'


But NOMADS has something. An aura. A lyricism, a kind of poetry. It has that certain– as Pommier himself might say – je ne sais quoi, that elevates it beyond simple 80's genre potboiler and into the fluid, subconscious realms of the surreal.


I can tell you that I absolutely adore Bill (ROCKY) Conti's urgent, erotic synth and guitar score – especially the opening theme and closing hard rock collaboration with ted Nugent. I can tell you that both Down and Brosnan are magnetic in a pair of extremely difficult roles that require them to achieve a bizarre sort of character symbiosis. I can tell you that the cold, washed out look of the film (perhaps the mark of a low budget, perhaps not) is claustrophobic and unsettling in its otherworldly, dim lit way.


It's difficult to believe that McTiernan would go on to create an endless spate of high octane, considerably less challenging, popular action pictures like DIE HARD and THE 13th WARRIOR because his maiden cinematic voyage is a work of such strikingly haunting and original moxy, such an intelligent, sophisticated, offbeat and mysterious psychological /supernatural thriller. Maybe the fact that NOMADS made about 10 cents at the box office scared McTiernan off from continuing in this daring, metaphysical fantasy vein.


Now, I'm not entirely sure if this is a "good" movie or a "bad" movie but you know what? I don't really care.


I know what I like…and I like NOMADS. A lot

 

4 Comments

  1. I saw this film when it first came out on VHS. I still have the tape and still love the movie. I think you are the first other people (besides my ex) who saw Nomads and loved it, too. It is so original, so spooky (the nuns! *shiver*), so intriguing and completely unlike any other movie I've seen. John, I'll watch it again and see how it starts for you. I didn't even know it was on DVD now! I do have to admit, though, that I love The 13th Warrior, too. The plot is much thinner, but I just love the barbarians and the interaction between the characters. (Generally speaking, I'm not a big fan of film of film adaptations of Michael Crichton novels...)
  2. I saw this movie back in the 80s and could not find it again until this week with help from IMDb. I got it from netflix and believe part of the beginning is missing. Am I incorrect? I remember the beginning of the movie having him photographing eskimos in the snow and the man standing alone was not alone when he took the picture. Is there portions missing from the dvd version? There were also flashbacks of him taking some of the pictures that he has up on his walls in the room but there were others present when he took the pictures. What can you tell me?
  3. I've obsessed about this film almost as long as you have, Chris. I think one reason it's so unsettling is the dichotomy between the idea (evil spirits that, once you draw their attention, inevitably make you their own) and the utter lack of anything supernatural in their appearance (I don't recall any real special effects in the film at all). And you're right, you can't overpraise Conti's score. Plus having good actors who take their roles seriously never hurts.
  4. Nice to see someone else appreciates this long forgotten gem. I really love this criminally underrated film. It was very badly marketed on its release (you only have to look at the poster) and I wish it would get the hi-def special edition treatment that many inferior films are receiving. Maybe it's time for McTiernan to re-visit the genre - his career isn't exactly stellar at the moment (although The Camel Wars sounds promising).

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About Chris Alexander:

Chris AlexanderChris Alexander is a lifelong cineaste, obsessed with eccentric horror movies, weird romance, black leather and spacey, strange music. Based in Toronto, he was a former critic and columnist for Canadian horror entertainment periodical RUE MORGUE before joining the ranks of the legendary FANGORIA magazine, a publication he was completely obsessed with as a child. He still gets a buzz when he sees his name in the masthead.

Alexander is also a Toronto radio personality (he's the "Friday Film Guy" on AM 640), a film history teacher at the Toronto Film College, appears regularily on MTV Canada and composes experimental music for film, television and  his own pleasure. His latest album is MUSIC FOR PARASITES, featuring cues he composed for the feature film AM I EVIL, the short picture COTTONMOUTH, the zombie western THE STINK OF FLESH and many others.

Alexander was the only Canadian film critic chosen to box noted "bad filmmaker" Uwe Boll in the "Raging Boll" event in Vancouver, September 2006. He lost brilliantly but not before spitting great gobs of fake blood at the gleefully insane auteur snarling face.

To learn more about the celluloid soaked world of Chris Alexander visit

www.chris-alexander.ca.