The Deserter (2006 film)

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The Deserter

The Deserter DVD cover
Directed by Eric B. Borgman
Produced by Eric B. Borgman
Written by Eric B. Borgman
Starring Eric B. Borgman ,
Michael Kaplan,
Michael Greeley,
Frank Croteau
Distributed by EBB Entertainment
Release date(s) April 19, 2006
Running time 75 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

The Deserter is an American, Revolutionary War, feature comedy-drama film released on April 19, 2006. It was written and directed by Eric B. Borgman a member one of Michael Legge's Sideshow Cinema actors. It premiered in film form at the Brussels International Festival of Contemporary Silent Film in June 2004.

Contents

[edit] About the Film

The Deserter, was shot in the style of a silent comedy movie from the 1920's. However, no use of the old fashioned title cards are utilized to tell the story. The whole film plays out visually so that people all over the world can enjoy the film with no language barriers.

Borgman who is a fan of the silent comedy genre credits Laurel & Hardy and Buster Keaton as his sources for his comedy inspiration. But unlike Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy he is not one half of a duo and unlike Keaton his character smiles.

Although influenced by some of the great visual humorists Borgman tries to capture the feel of a silent comedy but not the feel of some of his favorite comics.

The film is more than just a comedy however. Borgman was inspired by the writings of Ensign Jeremy Lister and the storyline was loosely based on the real high rates of desertion in the British 10th Regiment of Foot during the American Revolutionary War. Borgman tries to show the serious side of the war by letting the battles play out longer than usual in a film of this kind.

He also tried to make the film as authentic as possible by accurately portraying the battles as they may have actually looked and by making sure that the uniforms looked as period as possible.

Hundreds of extras were used in the making of the pivotal battle scenes which led Borgman to boast that he had more battle scenes in a silent comedy since Buster Keaton did in his 1927 classic The General.

[edit] Synopsis

Scene from The Deserter
Enlarge
Scene from The Deserter

It takes place during the American Revolution in the late 1700's. A loyal British drummer, one of the thousands of British soldiers stationed in America, accidentally drops his canteen into a stream while trying to fill it. He, by chasing his floating canteen down the stream, puts into motion a series of events which will won't stop until he is dead. For a British officer sees him chasing his canteen and mistakes it for his trying to desert the British army by running away into the woods. The officer quickly orders two of the dumbest soldiers after him. The drummer, after catching up with his canteen gets lost in the woods and can't find his way back to the British encampment. When the two British redcoats catch up with the "deserting" drummer, things go from bad to worse for him, when he finally realizes he is being hunted down for execution. His accidentally killing one of these soldiers doesn't help his case either. The drummer briefly escapes... right into the hands of the Americans! In the meantime, the British forces, back at the encampment, march off to meet the American forces for a grand battle, which will rage for hours. And which all the soldiers hunting down the drummer will conveniently miss. The story doesn't end until the officer and his small band of men sees the deserter hanged, but is that really the end of the story?

[edit] DVD Release

The Special Edition Director's Cut DVD release date was April 19, 2006 Patriot's Day. The DVD contains the original un-cut 75 minute feature length of The Deserter. The special features include an early twelve minute silent comedy by Borgman entitled, The Tree Surgeon, and a special behind-the-scenes of Borgman's next feature film The Man in the Movie.

[edit] Main cast

  • Eric Bruno Borgman — Deserter
  • Michael Kaplan — British Officer
  • George Souza — Drum Major
  • Michael Legge — Grenadier Soldier
  • Anthony Lea — Grenadier Soldier
  • Frank Croteau — Battalion Soldier
  • Steve Ricci — Light Infantry Soldier
  • Joseph Madden — Other Drummer

[edit] Quotes about the Film

  • "Like Chaplin in Shoulder Arms, Borgman lobs surreal grenades at the military's puffed-up chest." - Eric Beltmann, Flipside Movie Emporium
  • "Borgman handled the physical comedy like a master." - Dave Eaton, New York movie reviewer and newspaper editor.
  • "Part historical re-enactment and part old comedy. I saw... Stan Laurel in evidence and some funny bits with the drums and bungled execution, et al. (Eric has) a good screen presence." - Michael Legge, award winning writer and director of Democrazy and Honey Glaze.
  • "Very Ambitious!" - Scott MacGillivray, author of Laurel and Hardy:From the Forties Forward.
  • "If you like mammoth war scenes a'la The Patriot, this one may be worth your while. Also, Borgman is truly a renegade, indie filmmaker, and his ambition is worthy of our respect." - W. Duke Greenhill, Hybridmagazine.com.

[edit] External links