Sunday, September 15, 2024

Duel

 SPOILER ALERT! The plot will be discussed.

I have been showing films and leading discussions at my housing development. The most recent movie was one made for television in 1971. It’s entitled Duel, and it’s the film that put Steven Spielberg on the map. His directorial ability to build suspense here shows how he was ready to make Jaws.


Richard Matheson wrote the story, and he is a respected writer of horror and science fiction stories, including I am Legend and Hell House. He wrote several episodes for the original Twilight Zone series. This tale involves the character of David Mann (Dennis Weaver) who is on a business trip driving on a fairly desolate prairie road that looks like it belongs in the Old West. He passes a slow-moving truck, and that’s when things go badly for him. The trucker plays a cat-and-mouse game with him, zooming past, slowing down, and preventing him from passing. The harassment escalates as he waves David on when there is oncoming traffic which almost gets David killed. The trucker starts to bang into the back of David’s car and even tries to push him into the way of a train.

The theme of this movie deals with old-fashioned masculinity and emasculation. David’s last name is “Mann,” which implies he stands for a modern male who doesn’t live up to his name. His wife tells him on the phone that she is upset with him because he didn’t confront someone who made a pass at her. She says the fellow tried to “rape” her, but David implies it was more like making a pass at his wife and says he wasn’t going to get into a fistfight with the guy. David listens to a talk radio show and the man calling in says he is not the head of the house any longer because he stays at home, takes care of the house and the babies, and his wife is the breadwinner. A gas attendant says, after David notes he doesn’t need to get a hose fixed, “You’re the boss.” To which David says, “Not in my house.”


The title of the film suggests a deadly old-fashioned confrontation between two combatants. In this case, the weapons have been updated to motor vehicles. The setting is rural and primitive, as if we are dealing with an occurrence at the O.K. Corral. We never see the driver of the truck, only a hairy arm, a cowboy hat, and cowboy boots. He is symbolic of the idea of a rugged, individualistic male of the Old West. The truck he drives is a fuel tanker with the words “Flammable” written on the back. It’s like the truck is announcing its ferocity and making a challenge. At one point the truck sits under a dark underpass, and when its headlights come on it appears like a ferocious animal waiting for its prey.

Let’s get back to that hose that needs repair. It is one of several phallic symbols in the movie. The gas attendant carries the gas nozzle around, suggesting the male organ. On the radio there is a man who plays music on such things as a bicycle pump. The trucker tries to run David down while he is at a rattlesnake farm. And there is that train (think of the end of North by Northwest). All these male symbols stress how David’s manhood is in jeopardy, and how he must try to win it back.


David drives a Plymouth Valiant, the name of the car suggesting that there is that fierceness inside of David, waiting to be released. He does in fact confront the trucker at the climax of the story. He aims his car, damaged after attempting several escapes and with that hose bursting, at the oncoming truck near the edge of a cliff. He transforms his unimposing briefcase into a combatant’s tool and uses it to hold down the gas pedal so his Valiant will ram the truck. The collision causes flames, obscuring the trucker’s view. He is unable to halt his forward movement, and the truck and car tumble over the edge. Spielberg lets the camera linger on the destroyed truck until its wheels no longer turn. It’s like witnessing the death of a modern, menacing, stalking beast.

Mann jumps for joy as he celebrates the primal male urge to vanquish the enemy.