A
Fistful of Dynamite
This Sergio Leone film is definately
the least seen of all his westerns.
For some reason, this film is largely
forgotten. It is never shown on cable,
and the video was out of print for
many years but has recently been re-released
on both laserdisc and video. Hopefully
now that it has been re-released,
it will start getting the attention
it deserves.
This
movie is the exception to the rule
that Leone gets better with time,
but it is only a slight exception.
After all, it's hard to beat Once
Upon a Time in the West. Perhaps
the slight imperfections comes because
it was not originally a Leone project,
and so he did not have quite as
much control as usual.
This
film, despite its name, is not a
spaghetti western. It is what is
called a "Zapata Western",
after the famous Mexican revolutionary.
These films are characterized by
the simultaneously friendly and
antagonistic relationship between
a local bandit , and a foreigner
who is an expert at revolution.
In A Fistful of Dynamite , Juan
Miranda (Ron Steiger) is a Mexican
bandit who runs across Sean Mallory
(James Coburn), who is an IRA terrorist
on the run. After some initial hostility
and a few explosions, Juan convinces
Sean to rob the Bank of Mesa Verde.
Sean, however, arranges things so
that Juan frees hundreds of political
prisoners while looking for the
safe in the bank. After that, Juan
slowly turns into a full- fledged
revolutionary, while Sean loses
his revolutionary fervor.
To
contrast this plot with a few other
Zapata Westerns, in The Mercenary,
a Mexican who starts to get involved
in the revolution is helped by a
clever mercenary who treats himself
to the Mexican's water, women, and
gold. Quemada! ( also known as Burn!
which stars Marlon Brando) is the
story of a British officer (Brando)
who helps start a revolution in
the Antilles sugar farms by duping
the soon-to-be leader of the slaves
to rob a bank, then defend himself,
and then defend his people.
One
of the interesting things about
A Fistful of Dynamite is the weird,
offbeat, yet beautful Ennio Morricone
score. From the Main Title's refrain
of "Sean. Sean Sean Sean. Sean
Sean.", to the March of the
Beggars (Juan's Theme) croaking
"wop. Wop. wop.", Morricone
created something different than
the usual spaghetti western, yet
just as fun, and certainly just
as moving.
The
music is well suited to the equally
quirky direction by Leone. This
movie is full of fast zooms, extreme
closeups, exaggerated, cartoonish
visuals and sounds. A good example
is the scene in which Juan is travelling
with the upper-class snobs, who
proceed to stuff their faces with
all sorts of food (which Leone shows
in extreme close-ups), and make
fun of Juan and the poor Mexicans
like him. The same phrases are repeated
over and over, faster and faster,
until the train is finally stopped
by Juan's men. And one of my favorite
scenes in the movie is when Sean
first reveals his incredible array
of explosives, and the camera zooms
to Juan's amazed eyes.. the organ
music swells, and we see Sean standing
there with a banner floating above
him which reads "Banco National
de Mesa Verde". It's one of
those things that Leone does that
reveals exactly what a character
is feeling, even though nothing
has been said. And, of course, a
banner floating in midair above
someone is just never done in movies.
When Leone does it, it is suprising
and hilarious.
A
Fistful of Dynamite is a film unique
in the Leone body of work. It is
a comic film, yet serious at the
same time. Even though Juan is the
comic character, in this film the
comic character is every bit as
important as the serious one (John)
(as opposed to The Good, the Bad,
and the Ugly or Once Upon a Time
in the West ). It is Juan that we
see develop ideals, while at the
same time Sean loses his ("When
I started using dyanmite, I used
to believe in a lot of things. All
of it! Now I believe only in dynamite").
In elevating the comic character
to the equal of the serious one,
Leone creates a film that is sensitive
as it is cartoonish . "What
about me?" we hear Juan ask
at the end of the film. After these
sad parting words, that Juan realizes
that now he must fight by himself,
thus losing his comic, sidekick
quality, and becoming a serious
John-type character. This is the
only time that such a switch happens
in Leone's oevre, and I'm glad it
does. (Here)
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