5 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
KEOMA (Enzo G. Castellari, 1976) ***, 8 September 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Director Castellari is nowadays perhaps best-known (if at all) by the
younger generation of film buffs for one thing: making the original
INGLORIOUS BASTARDS (1977), which Quentin Tarantino has been
threatening to remake for years now. However, in my opinion, he should
instead be remembered for making this impressive, belated Spaghetti
Western gem.
An odd blend of violent action and heady mysticism apparently concocted
by one of the credited screenwriters Luigi Montefiori (better known to
hardened Euro-Cult fans as an actor under the alias of George Eastman)
but, as star Franco Nero and Castellari himself state in the Anchor Bay
DVD supplements, the script took so long to get written that they
decided to work without one and make the dialogue up as they went
along! That the end result is so satisfying (and practically unique in
the subgenre) is a remarkable achievement in itself.
Keoma is a half-breed returning home from the American Civil War to
find his hometown ravaged by the plague and overtaken by the villainous
Caldwell (Donal O' Brien); among his cohorts are Nero's three
half-brothers who had made his childhood a living hell, with his
surrogate father (William Berger) and colored mentor turned
banjo-playing town-drunk (Woody Strode) unable to do much to counter
Caldwell's oppression. A Bergmanesque, cadaverous old woman is
frequently seen roaming the streets dragging a cart behind her...
What follows is the typical confrontation between Good and Evil but
Castellari infuses the familiar mixture with several directorial
flourishes: occasionally striking compositions (particularly a
memorably Fordian opening shot), frequent use of slow-motion in true
Peckinpah-style, flashbacks in which Keoma is a spectator to his own
past experiences (inspired by Elia Kazan's THE ARRANGEMENT [1969]!), a
touch of elliptical editing, Christian symbolism (Keoma is crucified at
one point) and, most distressingly of all, a folksy soundtrack
(inspired by Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, no less and
warbled...er...sung by a shrill, high-pitched female singer and an
out-of-tune deep-voiced male) which narrates in song the action we're
seeing on the screen. I say distressingly because the Guido and Maurizo
De Angelis compositions found here have forever been a thorn in the
side of even the film's staunchest admirers!! Personally, I didn't mind
the female singer so much after a while but when her (possibly drunk)
male companion took over in the last half hour, I was in for some
cringe-inducing moments for sure...!
Despite these misgivings, the film is still one of the best Spaghetti
Westerns out there (and certainly the last great example of the
subgenre); its undoubted highlight is provided by a terrific, lovingly
protracted action set-piece in which Nero, Berger and a reformed Strode
(back to his former arrow-shooting glory - perhaps a nod to the role he
played in Richard Brooks' splendid THE PROFESSIONALS [1966]) wipe out
most of Caldwell's gang. Their triumph is short-lived, however, because
both Berger and Strode lose their lives in the ongoing struggle (Berger
poignantly so, while Strode's death scene is particularly great), with
Nero almost bowing out himself under the strain of his siblings'
torture - who have subsequently disposed of Caldwell and taken over the
town themselves; the final confrontation, then, between Keoma and his
three half-brothers is eerily set to the "strains" of Olga Karlatos'
(playing a woman Keoma had earlier on saved from a plague-infested
colony) wailing and screaming as she lies giving birth to a child
amidst the carnage!
While at first I was disappointed that the Anchor Bay DVD only included
the English dub, having watched it now it seems clear that the actors
were all speaking their dialogue in English on the set - although, as
connoisseurs will certainly know, this was all re-recorded back in the
studios anyway (as was common practice in the Italian film industry).
Still, if ever it gets shown again on Italian TV, I'll be sure to check
it out just for completeness' sake. Thankfully, however, Castellari
contributes a highly enthusiastic and informative Audio Commentary in
which he discusses his major influences while making the film, among
them Sidney J. Furie's THE APPALOOSA (1966), Altman's McCABE AND MRS.
MILLER (1971) and Peckinpah's PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID (1973).
Ultimately, Franco Nero in the title role is almost as iconic a figure
as Django and, hopefully, I should be getting to another fairly obscure
but highly intriguing Spaghetti Westen of his - Luigi Bazzoni's MAN,
PRIDE AND VENGEANCE (1968), an eccentric updating of Georges Bizet's
opera "Carmen", co-starring Klaus Kinski and Tina Aumont - pretty
soon...
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