8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
800 BULLETS (Alex De La Iglesia, 2002) ***, 12 April 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
I rented this one on a hunch, not having watched any of director De La
Iglesia's work, even if I had heard of him - if not the film in
question.
I thought this was going to be an out-and-out Spaghetti Western update,
and it looks like it at first, but the way it developed makes it
original and even more interesting than I had imagined! It's frequently
uproarious and displays a refreshing irreverence, especially in its use
of foul language (which I found even funnier because it's so similar to
our own); astoundingly, there are also sex scenes witnessed by, and
almost involving, a minor! Deliberately paced and overlong, it
ultimately emerges as an endearing, even infectious, spoof of Spaghetti
Western film-making and the world of stunt-men (which to me, having
been in Hollywood a little while back, has a special relevance).
Recurring jokes like forgetting the hanged man once the shooting's
over, a stuntman dedicated to making his fall from a roof-top as
realistic as possible, and the front of a poor woman's house being
demolished by a runaway van are very funny, and there's a hilarious
funeral finale with a surprising appearance by "Clint Eastwood" (who,
as everyone knows, became a household word in Italian Westerns filmed
in Spain)!
The cast is largely made up of unknowns (except for Carmen Maura) but
they enter enthusiastically into the tongue-in-cheek spirit of things,
with Sancho Gracia's characterization being especially vivid (at times,
even a moving one). Indeed, among the various in-jokes which crop up
throughout the film is the mention of the Raquel Welch/Burt Reynolds
Western 100 RIFLES (1969), a film in which Gracia really appeared!
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