4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
THE PRICE OF POWER (Tonino Valerii, 1969) ***, 8 September 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
I was unfamiliar with this film, until I saw it included in a list of
the Top 20 Spaghetti Westerns I recently came across (following the
marathon I made these last few weeks of films from the subgenre); it
was auspicious, then, that the film had to turn up almost immediately
on late-night Italian TV (for the first time, I'm pretty sure, in a
good number of years)!
Unfortunately, the cable reception of the channel on which it was
broadcast hasn't been great lately: I recorded the film on VHS but I
decided not to keep it due to this factor; as it happened, the very
next day I watched the film, I found out that it was available on a
Region 2 DVD from Italy (featuring an interview with uncredited
scriptwriter Ernesto Gastaldi) - and, having been sufficiently
impressed, I decided to order it there and then, even if I knew that I
wouldn't be getting to the DVD for quite a while as I like to allow
some time between one viewing of a film and the next! A brief
parenthesis here: when I recently purchased a spate of Spaghetti
Westerns on Italian DVD, I opted not to order Sergio Sollima's FACE TO
FACE (1967), since I was under the impression that it was a bare-bones
affair; however, I've just learned that the disc actually contains an
interview with the director (as had been the case with THE BIG GUNDOWN
[1966], which I bought). It did seem baffling to me that Sollima
wouldn't offer similar contribution to that film's DVD edition when he
actually considered FACE TO FACE as his favorite work (as per the
director's talent bio included on the Blue Underground Region 1 disc of
yet another Sollima Spaghetti Western - RUN, MAN, RUN [1968]); the
trouble is that I loved THE BIG GUNDOWN so much that I followed it with
a viewing of FACE TO FACE via the recording I owned made off Italian
TV! I did order the DVD of that film now - especially since it's still
discounted - but as I said with respect to a second look at THE PRICE
OF POWER (although I may still check out Sollima's interview when the
disc arrives)...
O.K., rant over: the film under review is quite an unusual Spaghetti
Western and a very interesting, indeed ambitious one at that, being a
transposition of the JFK assassination case to an Old West setting!
Actually, it's reminiscent of Anthony Mann's terse black-and-white
thriller THE TALL TARGET (1951) - which dealt with an assassination
attempt on the life of then-U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. It features
one of the most popular Italian stars from this subgenre, Giuliano
Gemma, in what is perhaps his most impressive Western role (many of his
other films tended to have a light-hearted bent). The supporting cast
includes at least two other notables: Van Johnson (in one of his few
and mainly unremarkable Italian films) as the American President killed
in post-Civil War Dallas and Fernando Rey as the head of a conspiracy
of Southerners - who not only plots his assassination but also
conveniently maneuvers the new acting U.S. leader, Johnson's
Vice-President, by means of blackmail!
Benito Stefanelli also makes a good impression as a corrupt sheriff who
pursues Gemma all through the picture, and with whom he's engaged a
couple of times in a 'duel in the dark' - with the guns resting on the
floor rather than in their respective holsters and the only light in
the room provided by the end of the cowboys' cigars! Also involved is
Ray Saunders as Gemma's black sidekick whom the narrative eventually
turns into the doomed "Lee Harvey Oswald" figure. Stelvio Massi - who
later cut his teeth, as director, on a number of poliziotteschi - is
behind the film's luminous cinematography; similarly, Luis Enrique
Bacalov supplies yet another great "Euro-Cult" score - which is
different enough from the style of Ennio Morricone as to be equally
distinguishable. Valerii's direction here may mot be as imposing as
that in other Spaghetti Westerns but he handles the proceedings
efficiently enough (the final gunfight is especially nicely done); the
film is certainly one of the more underrated entries in the subgenre
and, for those so inclined, the novelty of the plot line alone should
make it one to look out for...
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