Bill is a lucid, rational and powerful speaker who intent is to inform and to empower his audience. Kennedy, the war on drugs, the Secret Government and UFOs. His audiences hear the truth unfold as he writes about the assassination of John F. This information has been kept in Top Secret government files since the 1940s. This is far from being a war movie, but it is a picture of great solemnity, atmosphere and touching humanity.Bill Cooper, former United States Naval Intelligence Briefing Team member, reveals information that remains hidden from the public eye. Behold a Pale Horse features sparse and staccato Spanish guitar, fitting for both the location and the nervous and somewhat melancholic story.
This was by now an era in which you didn't have to have a blaring orchestral score (and thankfully those irritating free jazz scores of the late 50s were going out of style). A strong cast and thoughtful direction are enough to keep this picture moving. Finally, watch out for a brief but typically mesmerising bit part by Rosalie Crutchley as Quinn's wife. Italian character actor Paolo Stoppa, familiar from a lot of European co-productions, is very good too.
They are both very good here, but the best performance I feel belongs to Omar Shariff, grappling with some kind of a conscience, refusing to make the meek priest into a stereotype. One can imagine them playing brothers a good twin and a bad twin perhaps. Both have a stern bearing and charismatic presence. Both men are possessed of dark hair and sharp, stony features. It is interesting to see Gregory Peck and Anthony Quinn playing the hero and villain. Events seem to unfold in real-time, with a sprinkling of point-of-view shots to draw us into the unfolding action. Above all Zinnemann is a master of tension without over-manipulation. And yet he is also placing people within their context, showing young Paco dwarfed amid the houses of Pau, mirroring the mountains from which he has descended, or panning down from the figure of Christ to a reverent Anthony Quinn (shades here of Zinnemann's other Christian-themed pictures A Nun's Story and A Man for All Seasons). During the opening credits his camera tracks along a line of nameless faces, encouraging us to look over every line and notice every blink, introducing a quietly human picture. Zinnemann was not exactly a dynamic director but he had a certain way of drawing us into a story and holding our interest. A lot of this has to do with director Fred Zinnemann.
But despite this ruminating premise the picture just about manages to save itself from terminal dullness. The Spanish Civil War, or rather its aftermath, are the backdrop for these themes. In that vein Behold a Pale Horse, based on a novel by Hungarian screenwriter Emeric Pressburger, is a meditation on loyalty, trust and faith, not in religion but in religious institutions and individuals. There have not been many English-language movies made about the Spanish Civil War, and those that have been made (with the exception of Land and Freedom) tend to shy away from both politics and action, often slow-moving, contemplative affairs.