Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Marlon reads the Hollow Men
5:32 PM
| Posted by
Michael William Coenen
Marlon had a lot
of time on his hands as Francis was deeply embroiled in getting the Kurtz
compound scene up and running, as well as working and fighting with Dennis
Hopper. Amidst it all, Marlon
began reading one of the literary offerings made available to him by his
director.
“We are the
hollow men. We are the stuffed
men. Leaning together. Headpiece filled with straw. We are the hollow men. We are the stuffed men. We are the hollow men. The hollow men...the hollow men”
Marlon, now
adorned in his black pajamas, sat far off to the side, reading these first
words from T.S. Eliot’s poem, Hollow Men, and then seemingly meditating on
them. The Ifugao children who
played around him sensed a different, more intense, contemplative vibe coming
from Mr. Brando, allotting him sufficient space.
“The hollow
men...hollow men. We are the
hollow men. The stuffed men...”
Marlon kept
repeating these words to himself, over and over again. He found it mesmerizing to say it. The words also sparked his
imagination. It was as if he were
chanting the words.
“We are the
hollow men. We are the stuffed men.”
The words were
helping Marlon morph into the person of Kurtz, as well as Kurtz into the person
of Marlon Brando. Marlon was
beginning to feel as if the story of Walter E. Kurtz was the story of Marlon
Brando. Marlon believed that he
was in fact hollow, that he had been stuffed and propped up with all the
trappings of Western civilization, and that when all these things are removed,
that he is in fact quite hollow.
His headpiece is filled with straw, things dead, dry, things ripe for
the cleansing power of the flame.
Marlon wanted the cleansing flame, or at least to be loosed from all the
things cluttering his mind, heart, soul, and body. The old Time and Newsweek articles about the Vietnam War no
longer interested Marlon. Instead,
he found himself paging through and eventually reading the books that Francis
recommended for him, the books he envisioned being a part of Kurtz’s
library. Marlon would study
Frazier’s Golden Bough, ponder the Faustian Bargain, even explore the
possibility of the Christian Apocalypse, but it would be Eliot’s The Hollow Men
that would continue to intrigue Marlon and be his motivation in his role as
Kurtz.
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