“Even Dwarfs Started Small” is one such
experience. It came out in 1970, a year that was full of new cinematic
experiences, from John Cassavetes’ “Husbands”
– a thinking man’s “The Hangover”
before there was even such a thing – to Nicolas Roeg and Donald Cammell’s “Performance” – an acid-fueled
dressing-down of traditional masculinity and male sexuality.
But when
compared to other films that came out that year, “Even Dwarfs Started Small” is closer to Robert Altman’s “M. A. S. H.” in that both films are
anarchistic counter-cultural satires in which the system’s disease is exposed
when it is overrun by those who are supposed to make it work –medical officers
in “M. A. S. H.” – or those who are
supposed to benefit from it – asylum inmates in this film.
Herzog
shoots the cast closely, often using mid-shots. Over time, I started to forget
that I was watching a film with an all-dwarf cast. Herzog does not exploit them
for cheap laughs. He puts us uncomfortably close to their “otherness” but he
doesn’t do it patronizingly. The rare use of their height for comedic purpose
is not made at their expense, but with affection and humanity. Best exemplified
in one of the film’s best scenes, in which Hombre and a woman are forcibly
pushed into a bedroom to have sex. The woman gets on it without any problem but
Hombre repeatedly fails to do it. He doesn’t think to climb on the chair
and jump on the bed, but rather to make a footstool out of magazines. He never
manages it, but the scene isn’t shot as slapstick. Herzog shoots in a fairly
wide frame, forcing the viewer to focus on Hombre’s movements and actions. It
is a study in disproportion, not a gag.
Through
the anarchistic chaos created by the inmates, Herzog laughs at normality – one
scene has them reading an erotic magazine and giggling at the women’s bodies –
but doesn’t entirely condone their behavior. The dwarfs display apparently
unsimulated cruelty to animals and to blind dwarf guards. Both cases of
violence are filmed beautifully, particularly their attempts to evade or trick
the blind guards by creeping past them without being seen, or interfering in
their game of hockey. The latter two scenes are filmed in long, steady shots
similar to the aforementioned bedroom scene. It is reminiscent of silent
comedies such as “Safety Last!” in
that regard, keeping the camera at a distance and letting the actors’ bodies
interact with their environment. Even the cruel cockfight scene is shot with
beauty, the camera swooping over the fighting birds almost like a divinity
overseeing it. The outside world is temporarily forgotten as we get lost in the
fight.
If it
weren’t for the use of German language and the opening credits, you would be
forgiven for mistaking “Even Dwarfs
Started Small” for a Luis Buñuel film. It bears many familiar thematic and
visual hallmarks of his cinema, from the arid, desert setting in the Canary
Islands reminiscent of “Las Hurdes: Land
Without Bread” and “Simon Of The
Desert” to its visual blasphemy worthy of “Viridiana”:
-
The
dwarfs parading a monkey tied up on a cross.
-
A
pre-supper grace prayer that turns into a food fight.
-
The
film’s final image is that of its protagonist, Hombre, laughing maniacally for
over two minutes at a camel kneeling as if in prayer that eventually defecates,
as traditional South American chanting and music plays on the soundtrack.
I am too
much of a neophyte to detail what truly separates this film from a Buñuel film,
but I think I can be quite safe in saying that Herzog seems to have more
affection for his characters than Buñuel did. While Buñuel was not devoid of
empathy and kindness – see “Los Olvidados”
– he often treated his victims as badly as his villains. Herzog, while not
shying away from his protagonists’ insanity and cruelty, puts the blame on the
system, as was the popular thing to do back then. Even his hapless instructor –
who ends up stuck in a parody of a Nazi salute, arguing with a tree trunk – is
just another victim of the institution he runs.
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