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THE FIVE MAN ARMY (Don Taylor and Italo Zingarelli, 1969) **1/2, 14 February 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
To begin with, this is one of the first films I ever recall watching
my father having acquired a copy on 16mm when I was still a kid!;
needless to say, I've been wanting to re-acquaint myself with it for
several years particularly to see how it stacked up against other
Spaghetti Westerns which, naturally, I came across much later
and,
this, in spite of Leonard Maltin's unflattering rating!
As it turned out, the film lived up to my expectations in being a
middle-of-the-road genre effort not one of the best, perhaps, but
reasonably entertaining all the same. Incidentally, it forms part of a
handful of Spaghetti Westerns with the Mexican Revolution as backdrop;
an added attraction to the film, then, is its main plot involving a
caper aboard a moving (and heavily-guarded) train it has, in fact,
been referred to as a cross between THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960; in
view of the select group called upon to aid in a cause) and THE WILD
BUNCH (1969; which had a similar robbery as a subplot)!
While the central train sequence involves some notable tension (the
elderly dynamite expert loses part of his equipment, the samurai falls
off and has to run across a lengthy stretch of fields in order to
rejoin his associates), the gang is never shown to be in any serious
danger throughout; the final confrontation with the Army, for instance,
is nothing at all like the notorious massacre seen in THE WILD BUNCH
itself in fact, none of them gets wounded or killed
and even the
tension within the outfit over whether they should hand over the gold
to the revolutionaries or else keep it for themselves is resolved
without so much as a punch (rather it's shrugged off with a laugh!).
The multi-national group is played by Americans Peter Graves (well cast
in a basic extension of his signature role in the classic MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE TV series) and James Daly (his presence here isn't
displeasing yet quite baffling, as he can't have been at all a familiar
name to Italians personally, I only knew him from his brief role in
PLANET OF THE APES [1968]!), Japanese Tetsuro Tamba (who's just as
anonymous as Daly perhaps the film's budget could afford only one
foreign 'star') and, of course, Italians Bud Spencer (a staple of the
genre and, thankfully, resorting only very briefly to his trademark
comic brawling) and the youthful Nino Castelnuovo (who, naturally,
sides with the Revolution all along). The supporting cast includes
another genre contribution from Italian starlet Daniela Giordano (as a
Mexican peasant girl who shows interest in samurai Tamba): her lovely
presence is always welcome and I still recalled the scene here in
which the Army General tears off her clothes from all those years ago!
but it's not quite as captivating as in the two other films of hers
that I've watched; there's also Giacomo Rossi-Stuart who, for an
actor of his stature, is given very little screen-time as a lieutenant
to the Mexican General.
Having mentioned the surprise casting, one also has to question the
decision behind offering the directorial reins to a minor-league
American, former actor Taylor; incidentally, years later, when Giordano
was asked by a magazine to comment about the film, she couldn't even
recall him being on the set and that co-director Zingarelli handled
most of the proceedings! Dario Argento was also behind this film as a
scriptwriter which makes the film's tameness all the more curious
and, given its derivative nature, perhaps shows his ultimate
disenchantment with the Spaghetti Western genre
or else he was already
thinking of branching out into direction (his debut film, the seminal
giallo THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE [1970], was released not long
after). THE FIVE MAN ARMY is marked by yet another rousing Ennio
Morricone score which is cited by fans as being among his best from
this era but, to me, it felt somewhat too similar to his work on Sergio
Leone's "Dollars" trilogy!
Finally, I couldn't really determine the running-time of the film
since it was interrupted by numerous publicity spots (I watched a VHS
recording of a TV broadcast); however, curiously enough, the Italian
version is listed as being only 91 minutes long on "Stracult"
whereas
the edition prepared for U.S. consumption is 107 minutes!
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