3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
BANDIDOS (Massimo Dallamano, 1967) ***, 31 March 2007
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Like THE PRICE OF POWER (1969), which I watched last September, I only
became aware of this obscure Spaghetti Western when it was included in
an all-time best poll on the "Spaghetti Westerns Database" website. As
it turned out, it's a pretty good example of the genre, though I
wouldn't quite place in the top rank. Star Enrico Maria Salerno brings
intelligence to the genre - much like Gian Maria Volonte' did in FACE
TO FACE (1967). The credits are quite modest, but Egisto Macchi's score
is certainly exemplary; interesting characterizations, too, are
somewhat nipped in the bud by a mostly unfamiliar cast.
Still, the complex plot keeps one watching: featuring a traveling-show
backdrop, it's essentially a revenge saga between old pals; one trains
a young gun to eliminate the other, because he can no longer use his
smashed hands - but the villain is revealed to be the one man who could
clear the mysterious boy of murder! Though the film's tone is generally
serious, an anarchist streak surfaces during one scene where Salerno's
current protégé is murdered in cold blood by a cowboy in the audience,
just for a lark. The climactic shoot-out is somewhat drawn-out, but
it's capped by a clever bit involving a mirror.
I watched this via a slightly trimmed German DVD - where one graphic
shot to the neck is missing from the main feature but curiously present
in the accompanying theatrical trailer!; it also seems to cut off a
little too abruptly at the very end.
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