3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
TODAY IT'S ME
TOMORROW YOU (Tonino Cervi, 1968) ***, 9 February 2008
![]()
Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
I'm sure this title has been broadcast on Italian TV many times over
the years but, only after renting it on DVD along with many another
Spaghetti Western, did I bother to check out whether it was any good
and I was surprised to see it receive a *** rating on the "Cult Filmz"
website! As it turned out, I found myself agreeing with that assessment
which makes the film one of the better (if largely unsung) entries in
this profuse, eclectic and erratic genre.
An interesting name in the credits is that of co-screenwriter Dario
Argento; actually, early in his career the soon-to-be horrormeister
worked on several such efforts in this capacity (including the ultimate
genre masterpiece, Sergio Leone's ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST [1968]).
Similarly, director/co-screenwriter Cervi started out as a producer on
films by such Italian art-house heavyweights as Antonioni, Bertolucci,
Bolognini, De Sica, Fellini, Lattuada, Monicelli and Visconti, etc.
though, later, he even dabbled in nunsploitation flicks!
Anyway, as I said, this is a pretty good Spaghetti Western albeit
saddled with a catchpenny (and meaningless) title involving a typical
revenge plot: leading man Brett Halsey (appearing, unnecessarily, under
the amusing pseudonym Montgomery Ford!) emerges from prison after five
years, having been framed for the murder of his Indian squaw bride
(shown in sepia-toned flashback, this is pretty much a genre fixture);
he rallies a compact but formidable band of gunmen/mercenaries (shades
of THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN [1960]) and sets out in pursuit of the real
culprit, ex-pal Tatsuya Nakadai (the celebrated Japanese actor is given
the Mexican name of Elfego, though he wields a deadly machete in the
fashion of a samurai!).
Halsey appeared in a number of low-brow Spaghetti Westerns (one of them
being ROY COLT AND WINCHESTER JACK [1970], incidentally an irregular
and disappointing stint in the genre by Mario Bava, another seminal
figure in Italian horror cinema) but this is most probably the best one
he did. Accompanying the appropriately dour and black-clad lead, among
others, are beefy Bud Spencer (a future icon of brawling comic fare
by the way, I have three more Spaghetti Westerns of his lined up for
this week, one of which also credits Argento among its scriptwriters)
and genre/Euro-Cult stalwart William Berger (his character is something
of a fop and, furthermore, has a gambling addiction).
Nakadai's presence here, then, is a delightful surprise which
definitely works to the film's advantage (his demise, in a
confrontation not unlike that in a Budd Boetticher Western, is a
particular highlight); with this in mind, prolific composer Angelo
Francesco Lavagnino incorporates several weird Oriental sounds into the
traditional Spaghetti Western motifs and the result is effective
indeed. Sergio D'Offizi's notable cinematography, however, isn't
rendered justice by the English-dubbed print utilized for the VCI DVD
which is considerably scratched and muddy (at one point, Halsey remarks
that "It'll be dark soon"
but the sky, as it appears, is already
pitch-black!). Needless to say, the film contains the expected
set-pieces of violent action including an admirably sustained forest
ambush at the climax.
| Plot summary | Ratings | External reviews |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |