7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
MINNESOTA CLAY (Sergio Corbucci, 1965) **1/2, 9 February 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Corbucci's second Spaghetti Western is an improvement on the first
MASSACRE AT GRAND CANYON (1965) but still a long way from his best
efforts in the genre (namely DJANGO [1966] and THE GREAT SILENCE
[1968]). The leading man is Cameron Mitchell, who wisely opted to
appear in European films tackling starring roles rather than be
stranded in Hollywood playing poor supporting ones; that said, in the
same year as this film, he was featured in a fine 'B' Western by Monte
Hellman RIDE IN THE WHIRLWIND (1965) alongside rising star (and
screenwriter) Jack Nicholson! The narrative provides many typical
Spaghetti Western elements but, as I said, it's an early example yet
so that it lacks the baroque touches inherent in later outings (suffice
to compare Corbucci's relatively sober treatment here to the
tongue-in-cheek approach to the same concept in the self-explanatory
BLINDMAN [1971]!).
Here, as in his two better-regarded genre classics, Corbucci gives us a
hero his name probably derives from Jackie Gleason's character,
Minnesota Fats, in the pool-room drama THE HUSTLER (1961)! who has to
battle not just the villains but a physical ailment (he's slowly going
blind). Besides, he has a daughter who thinks him dead and he's
willing to offer her his protection, while remaining silent about his
paternity (only at the climax, when the villain callously exploits his
condition by putting the girl in Mitchell's line of fire, does he
confess to their kinship!).
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