5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A PROFESSIONAL GUN (Sergio Corbucci, 1968) ***, 24 August 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Last week, I came across a sale of Italian DVDs of several Spaghetti
Westerns; I managed to purchase 4 of them and, being one of 2 I hadn't
watched before, this ended up as the first I checked out.
Actually, I had missed this on late-night Italian TV; considering that
a similar 'political' Spaghetti Western directed by Corbucci and
co-starring Franco Nero and Jack Palance, namely COMPANEROS (1970), had
been a bit too much tongue-in-cheek for my taste, I expected this to be
in the same vein. However, while certainly lighthearted in comparison
with Corbucci's DJANGO (1966; which I should revisit again in a couple
of days) and especially THE GREAT SILENCE (1968), it's a more balanced
proposition than COMPANEROS (particularly with respect to Palance's
performance - quietly menacing here as opposed to the campiness of the
later film) and, thus, superior to it in practically every way.
Nero has already matured quite a bit from the youthful gunslinger in
DJANGO; here, he's basically playing a variation on Clint Eastwood's
iconic Man With No Name figure in Sergio Leone's "Dollars Trilogy"
(incidentally, Nero's own voice resembles that of Enrico Maria Salerno
- who used to dub Eastwood in those films!). Indeed, the ongoing game
of cat-and-mouse revolving around Nero, Palance and Mexican
revolutionary Tony Musante is clearly inspired by the tricky
relationship that went on between Eastwood, Eli Wallach and Lee Van
Cleef in THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966)! This is most evident in
the numerous scenes where the taciturn Nero gets the brash Musante out
of trouble or, conversely, 'sells' him to the authorities...and even
more in the rather splendid showdown between the three characters,
undoubtedly the film's highlight - given another dimension by being set
in a bullring with Palance sporting a wig (he's nicknamed Curly!) and
Musante made up as a clown!!
Despite her belated entrance in the film, Giovanna Ralli makes quite an
impression as a fiery Mexican woman who hitches up with Musante;
Euro-Cult and Spaghetti Western regular Eduardo Fajardo is also on hand
as the requisite figure of oppression (who, at one point, is made to
eat a living lizard by Musante!). While the comedy never quite descends
into spoofiness and the political content is thankfully downplayed, the
action sequences are very well handled...and the film is further
blessed with a memorable theme tune by the one and only Ennio Morricone
(with a little help from his friend and protégé Bruno Nicolai).
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