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THE BIG GUNDOWN (Sergio Sollima, 1966) ***, 24 August 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
At the 61st Venice Film Festival, Quentin Tarantino named THE BIG
GUNDOWN not only his favorite Spaghetti Western but one of the all-time
Top 5 Westerns!; ironically, though I knew of the film's reputation and
had actually already missed out on it on late-night Italian TV due to a
power cut, I was all set to give it another miss because I had intended
to attend a screening of the latest film by nonagenarian Portuguese
film-maker Manoel de Oliveira during which he was also to be presented
with a Lifetime Achievement Award...but when, during a Press
Conference, Tarantino singled out this one as being the film to see at
the "Italian Kings Of The 'B'" retrospective (which he and Joe Dante
were presiding over), I just had to be there - since, unlike most other
titles at the Festival, it was reserved just that one screening!
The show, then, was delayed by an unattended bag left inside the
theater from the previous screening which, incidentally, had been
Ferdinando Baldi's Spaghetti Western BLINDMAN (1972) and, given the
paranoid state of affairs post-9/11, this necessitated the intervention
of bomb disposal units/dogs/soldiers/police before anyone could be
allowed to re-enter the hall and the projection of the next film could
proceed! If that wasn't enough, Joe Dante - who was present at the
screening and my brother and I could overhear him waxing lyrical to his
wife about the film's qualities - had to leave the theater after the
first few minutes of the projection because, for some reason, English
subtitles were not supplied with the only available print!
Anyway, let's get to the film itself: from the accompanying interview
with director Sollima, I learned that the Tomas Milian role was
originally intended for Gian Maria Volonte', who was to have played a
much older "prey" - but then the characters' ages were reversed. As it
turned out, this was the first film to feature Milian's "Cuchillo"
Sanchez character - a wily Mexican peasant and a dexterous
knife-thrower - which he reprised in RUN, MAN, RUN (1968; also directed
by Sollima and whose R1 DVD courtesy of Blue Underground I ordered
following this viewing, also because it's the only remaining title from
the company's "The Spaghetti Western Collection" set I have yet to
watch!). The original treatment (by Franco Solinas) was much more
politicized but, even if this element was eventually toned down, it's
still palpable in the film's critical depiction of the upper-classes -
arrogant, duplicitous and perverse - vis-a'-vis the struggling and
downtrodden but lusty (and, by extension, virile) lower classes.
Lee Van Cleef has one of his best roles ever as renowned bounty hunter
(with an eye on a place in the Senate) Jonathan Corbett; to me, his
relationship with Milian's character is one of the strongest ever to be
established within the entire Western genre, and it's this that
elevates the film above most non-Leone Italian efforts. Ennio Morricone
provides one of his most eclectic and haunting scores that's weird and
exhilarating at the same time, especially towards the end of the film
when the song (ironically called "Run, Man, Run" and with a heightened
vocal rendition by Christy to match!) - which is also heard over the
opening credits - is reprised. In contrast to the operatic and baroque
styles adopted by the other two Sergios - Leone and Corbucci,
respectively - Sollima utilizes a much more sober, humanist and,
ultimately, realistic approach.
The complexity of this film's script belies the general low esteem in
which the genre is held (being episodic in nature, with Van Cleef and
Milian meeting up with a plethora of diverse characters during the
course of the manhunt; one of the most memorable scenes is when Van
Cleef goes to look for Milian's wife, a feisty prostitute who verbally
abuses her husband for having deserted her but then lashes out at Van
Cleef when realizing his true intent, after which the latter is
cornered by the entire local community!); indeed, at the time, these
films were more authentic than the examples - the Western was then on
its last legs - churned out by Hollywood...at least until THE WILD
BUNCH (1969) came along!
I remember when the film was reviewed in a journal available outside
the venue of the Venice Film Festival, it was described as having
allegiances with the giallo genre - Milian is accused of being a serial
rapist - but, having rewatched the film, this element isn't
sufficiently stressed to make that connection! One of its more
interesting aspects, however, is the reciprocated respect that passes
between Van Cleef and Austrian bodyguard/ex-military
officer/aristocrat/marksman Gerard Herter (whose character Sollima
admitted to having based on Erich von Stroheim). This, in turn, gives
way to a terrific extended climax: first, we see Milian duel with the
real culprit of the crimes he's suspected of, then Van Cleef's
stand-off with the Baron, and finally the confrontation between Corbett
and the villainous railroad tycoon who appointed him to trail Milian in
the first place. The cast also features a brief but striking turn by
Nieves Navarro as a nymphomaniac rancher(!) and Fernando Sancho as a
Mexican policeman who, hating the revolutionaries as much as the
Americans, is content to let them cut each others' throat.
I'm surprised, therefore, that the film has still to make it to R1 DVD
but I'm glad I picked up the R2 edition: the remastered print is
beautiful and the film contains a 15-minute interview (though the video
proved problematic initially) with Sergio Sollima that was highly
engaging, informative and even funny (his quips about the highbrow
Italian films of the time, the critics' darlings as opposed to the
largely neglected genre offerings, is priceless!); in fact, I wish he'd
done a full-length Audio Commentary for the film, as I really could
have listened to him talk all day!!
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