5 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
RED SUN (Terence Young, 1971) ***, 27 September 2007
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
This Franco-Italian "Eastern Western" has intrigued me since I read
about it on a magazine, in view of its then-upcoming showing on Italian
TV, when I was about 7 years old but it literally seemed to vanish
from the face of the earth in the interim! Given that fact and Leonard
Maltin's unpromising ** rating, I had suspected that it was going to be
a big disappointment when I eventually catch up with it but, happily,
it turned out not to be the case. It is actually a very enjoyable
large-scale action film which, while perhaps lacking the touch of
greatness, deserves to be re-evaluated more positively.
The four international leads Charles Bronson, Toshiro Mifune, Alain
Delon, Ursula Andress are top-notch and the supporting cast also
includes Capucine, Anthony Dawson and Luc (here billed as Luke)
Merenda. The chemistry between betrayed outlaw Bronson and samurai
warrior Mifune is especially successful and provides the film with some
nice humorous touches (as well as a couple of good lines); their
casting is all the more interesting for its pairing one of THE SEVEN
SAMURAI (1954) with a member of THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960), that
film's equally popular Americanization! Delon has a smaller part than I
was expecting but he does well as Bronson's double-crossing
partner-in-crime who, apart from the pre-requisite European
sophistication, has a vicious streak about him. Andress adds the
required eye-candy as his sluttish girlfriend and, along with Monica
Randall (playing Mifune's inexperienced one night stand at Capucine's
rundown brothel), provides the film with some unexpected if very
welcome dashes of nudity.
Besides, there's a fine if subdued score from Maurice Jarre; as befits
the film's title, too, renowned cinematographer Henri Alekan often
bathes the scenery in a warm golden hue and the use of remote locations
throughout is inspired. Still, the film could probably do with a few
trims here and there, as some scenes tend to go on too long such as
the afore-mentioned mid-section revolving around Bronson and Mifune,
and the climactic Indian attack. The full-frame presentation is not too
bad considering: I can only complain of excessive headroom on occasion
and a general washed-out look to the print on the U.K. disc I watched.
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