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Roy Colt And Winchester Jack (Mario Bava, 1970) **, 25 November 2007
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
While this comic Spaghetti Western was nowhere near as bad as its low
reputation amidst the director’s canon would seem to suggest, it can’t
possibly hold a candle to Sergio Leone’s classic THE GOOD, THE BAD AND
THE UGLY (1966) – and it would be puerile for anyone to attempt
comparisons of this sort!
It’s the last of Bava’s three such genre efforts but, actually, the
first I’ve watched; I used to think that he was constrained within the
number of relatively low-brow peplums he made, but even those showed
greater commitment – and vigor during the action sequences. Here we get
plenty of brawling and shooting, to be sure, but the handling
throughout is decidedly sloppy…as if Bava, rather than be inspired by
these traditionally ‘big’ moments, wanted to get such genre
requirements out of the way!
That said, despite utilizing a wide variety of locations in its plot
about two rival outlaw gangs’ quest for gold, these don’t seem to have
stimulated the director’s trademark compositional skills; even worse,
the comedy element comes across as heavy-handed most of the time,
resulting in a flat and drawn-out film (even if it runs for a mere 85
minutes)!
Brett Halsey (from Bava’s FOUR TIMES THAT NIGHT [1969]) and Charles
Southwood don’t exactly generate fireworks in the title roles and, in
fact, the best in the cast are Marilu' Tolo as Winchester’s spirited
(and shrewd) Indian girl and Teodoro Corra' as The Reverend, the
atypically buffoonish baddie – a Russian émigré who still can’t get
over the cold of his native land. Isa Miranda (who would work again
with Bava when he treaded more familiar ground in BAY OF BLOOD [1971])
appears as the brothel Madame in what is perhaps the most slapsticky
and forced set-piece in the entire film.
Hardly memorable in itself, there are still a few mild highlights in
this reasonably agreeable, innocuous yet patchy genre offering: the
spastic gunman at the beginning, the obviously fake snake which menaces
Winchester (reminiscent of the one in Fritz Lang’s THE Indian TOMB
[1959]), the exploding villain, and the final shot with the heroes’
feet up in the air as they engage in yet another fisticuff. Piero
Umiliani’s lively score certainly contributes to the film’s
characteristically light touch.
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