Finally saw this tonight, its been called the "most Italianate of American Westerns" by some critics (more so than Eastwoods contemporary Hang em High) and I'll have to admit it really starts off like gangbusters, after the unusual opening credits sequence (its shot to resemble an oil painting looking as if the film is being projected upon a canvas). Director was Gordon Douglas who did "Rio Conchos", "Chuka", "Them", "Robin & The Seven Hoods", and "In Like Flint" to name a few. Its initial first half has a way more SW feel to it than "Hang Em' High".
Unfortunately what I watched was a fullscreen pan & scan a bit blurry with the colors seeming a bit too strong, recorded off a broadcast so it wasn't quite the best way to watch it.
It was shot on location in Colorado.
We see two groups, a small army of mercenary outlaws and a trio riding in opposite directions with a river valley in the b.g. One side of the river leads to the Mexican border.
Lee Van Cleef is Travis the Barquero the ferryman, and we see him plying his trade as he pulls a wagon of settlers across, his only weapons are a bowie knife and some sort of long range rifle of a Sharps or Spencer type. He has one prop from his SW days and that's his "Angel Eyes" tobacco pipe.
We first see (Jack Remy) Oates in bed with a plump sweaty Hispanic whore Layeta, wearing his black hat with a fancy gold hat-band in a saloon/whore house the "Double Eagle" in the town of Buckskin (very frontier looking with a lot of log cabin buildings), he's looking his sleaziest best. Some sample dialog.
Whore (fawning) "am I not beautiful senior"? Jack (looking disgusted) "I need a drink". Whore "Say it senior." Jack "you're beautiful...oh are you beautiful". Whore "why do you wear your sombrero"? Jack " why do you wear your stockings" Whore "because they are pretty" Jack "my hat's pretty"
a bit later the whore is splashing perfume on herself while singing...
Whore "do I smell senior'? Jack "yea you sure do".
The massacre of the town starts and Jack is shooting from the window
A Mexican male breaks into Jacks room and asks "whats going on"
Jack "we're shooting people". and Jack blows him away. Jack to whore "you live in a lousy neighborhood, you ought to move".
Jack is in his command post for the raid on the town by his small army of misfits. Their goal is the bank and a shipment of Winchester Rifles that an army patrol is escorting. Oates' second in command is a Frenchman Marquette (Kerwin Matthews).
Jack dresses, Layeta asks "Senior wouldn't it be nice to take Layeta with you" Jack "no" Layeta "will I see you again"? Jack "I don't think so" and he shoots her.
The action sequences are pretty good throughout the whole massacre.
There are some very good character actors Forrest Tucker (Mountain Phil ) puts in an over the top memorable performance as a mountain man. All I remember of Tucker is his TV (F Troop) performance but he's a hoot in this flick too.
Marie Gomez plays Nola (Chiquita from The Professionals) she is Travis's woman. Mariette Hartley plays the unfaithful wife of a "squatter" who offers herself to Travis (a type of person she loathes but is attracted too) if he'll save her husband, he does, and she does, and Nola doesn't mind.
The film looses steam unfortunately once the confrontation becomes a Mexican standoff at the river, it even quotes FAFDM with a bit where Jack smokes reefer and has a flashback but it just doesn't work. The flash back recalls how he got his hat, not exactly a major plot point, and it feels as if it was stuck in there just to be going with the flow of the late 60's early 70's idea of cool.
The film had potential but ends up loosing its way and feels more like a TV program at the end.
The barge battle was a bit hurried but you have to admit different.
The final duel between Travis & Jack is flat has no dramatic build up at all, almost as if they ran out of time. Score is nothing special.
Van Cleef should have had a bit more screen time he's just not featured enough in my opinion, but he is acting in a very different role, not a cool efficient killer, not and ex outlaw, not a drunk, more of a pioneering business man. And this, come to think of it in hindsight may have been his biggest career screwup, he was typecast for years by Hollywood as an outlaw, then he got that role of a lifetime as Mortimer, he could of, or at least his agent could have really tried to do (as Eastwood did and parlayed the MWNN character into an American film career) if they had held out. If he had played another strong Mortimer type in a successful American film here who knows how far he may have gone.
This would have been a great Leone or Corbucci or Sollima film if they had the guts to bring an Italian director over and give him a budget, Peckinpah would have been excellent also, too bad, it was a unique story, and they would have made more out of it.
This needs a widescreen DVD transfer release, please.