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DJANGO, KILL! (IF YOU LIVE SHOOT!) (Giulio Questi, 1967) ***, 24 August 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
This one certainly lives up to its reputation as the most peculiar
Spaghetti Western there is, a quality which makes it unique but not
exactly entertaining (the pace is slow and the film somewhat
protracted, if never less than fascinating)!
It features an atypical performance from lead Tomas Milian: usually the
brash man of action with a humorous streak, here he's the cynical and
mostly passive observer who even arrives late for the climax! Apart
from the star, Marilu' Tolo and Ray Lovelock, the international cast -
including several non-professionals - is unfamiliar but, as director
Questi said in the exclusive Audio Commentary, their indelible faces
were just what he needed for the film! By the way, in spite of the
film's English title, it's not related to the 1966 DJANGO - and, in
fact, Milian's character remains unnamed throughout - that spawned
innumerable variations but only one direct sequel (made more than 20
years after the original)!
Here, we also find several elements of Gothic horror (Milian 'rising'
from the dead, the 'mad woman' character borrowed from "Jane Eyre", the
weird prison torture scene involving vampire bats and iguanas, the
fiery climax in which the villain's face is covered with melted gold,
etc.); besides, Tolo is made-up to look like Barbara Steele and the
greedy townsfolk's gory groping into the body of a dying bandit riddled
with golden bullets curiously anticipates the zombie films of George
Romero! Actually, the film's graphic depiction of violence gave it a
certain notoriety which further fueled its cult status; in fact, the
bullet sequence and the scalping of an Indian were censored at the time
but, curiously, got reinstated for the shortened 1975 re-issue under
the name of ORO HONDO (which had been the film's working title)!
There's even a scene in which a horse is saddled with a charge of
dynamite and let loose among the villains (whereupon we see shots of
its intestines and the body parts of the various victims strewn about!)
- though, in all fairness, in A PROFESSIONAL GUN (1968) a man was also
nonchalantly killed by a grenade in the mouth!!
Other unexpected elements in the film are its religious overtones
(apart from Milian's crucifixion, the Indians who help him are mystics
while the villainous Hagerman also serves pretty much as a
bible-thumping preacher to the community) and the presence of
black-clad gay cowboys as prototype Fascists (thankfully, we're spared
their gang-rape of Lovelock - here in his film debut! - whose immediate
reaction, naturally, is to shoot himself) led by a Spaniard (all
dressed in white!) that goes by the name of Mr. Zorro(?!), and who
shares a love-hate relationship throughout with a spirited parrot!!
The film also features a good score by Ivan Vandor and Techniscope
photography by Franco Delli Colli (though the outdoor night scenes are
way too dark!), and the locations - Questi was especially proud of his
uncharacteristic white desert - are notable too. Franco Arcalli, an
unusual combination of screenwriter and film editor, devises some
'trippy' montages throughout - which, therefore, adds psychedelia to an
already eclectic mix of cinematic styles that distinguish this
Spaghetti Western!
I opted to purchase the Italian DVD over Blue Underground's R1 edition
due to the inclusion here of the afore-mentioned highly informative,
full-length Audio Commentary featuring director Questi (who is very
modest and actually attributes many of the film's bizarre touches to
logical progressions of the narrative - which, needless to say, doesn't
entirely convince the trio of moderators who accompany him throughout
this engaging discussion!). However, with respect to the otherwise
commendable Alan Young Pictures disc, one has to contend with a
distracting layer change (in mid-sentence!), at least one other
instance of audio drop-out and a baffling reversal, for one line of
dialogue, to the English soundtrack (for the record, I watched the
Italian-language version with the audio set in its original mono
rendition; I tend to scoff at re-mixes of classic films)!!
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