2 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A Town Called Bastard (Robert Parrish and, uncredited, Irving Lerner, 1971) *1/2, 26 February 2006
![]()
Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
This British-Spanish co-production is one of the countless films shot
in Spain in the wake of the unexpected phenomenal success enjoyed by
the Italian "Spaghetti" Westerns and, as is typical of such genre
efforts, features an eclectic assortment of established and emerging
international stars: Robert Shaw, Telly Savalas, Stella Stevens, Martin
Landau, Fernando Rey, Michael Craig, Al Lettieri, Dudley Sutton,
Antonio Mayans, etc. Ironically, however, this incoherent mess of a
movie serves as a shining example as to why that most American of film
genres became a dying breed in the 1970s and is nowadays practically
(or is that officially?) extinct.
I really wanted to like this film, not only because the Western is one
of my favorite types of movies but also because it had all the
qualities, including an intriguing premise, to be a good one - not to
mention the fact that my father had purchased a paperback edition of A
TOWN CALLED BASTARD's novelization following its original release! As
it is, the film's sole virtue (if, indeed, it can even be called that)
is its sheer eccentricity: for instance, Stevens, playing a widow out
for revenge on the man who betrayed her revolutionary husband, sleeps
inside a coffin(!) driven around in a carriage by her dumb
manservant(?) Sutton; Savalas, as a blood-thirsty renegade, who at
first appears to be the film's main villain, is unceremoniously
dispatched by his own henchman Lettieri very early on in the picture;
the villain of the piece, then, turns out to be Landau who, in the
film's very first scene, is seen pillaging side-by-side our legendary
hero-turned-priest Shaw!; Fernando Rey, playing a blind peasant, is the
only one who can identify rebel Shaw who, in the end turns out to have
been merely a front for...well, nevermind! As you can see, the plot is
very confusing and it gets stranger from there! The production team
responsible for this film were also behind other Western fare around
the same period of time, like CUSTER OF THE WEST (1967), BAD MAN'S
RIVER (1971), CAPTAIN APACHE (1971) and PANCHO VILLA (1972).
| Ratings | External reviews | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |