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Italy
- U.S.A.
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1975
Directed
by Antonio Margheriti
Starring
Jim Brown
Lee
Van Cleef
Fred
Williamson
Color
| 103 Minutes
| PG
Format:
DVD (R1 - NTSC)
Anchor Bay Entertainment
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A
fistful of spaghetti westerns in
a bargain-priced megaset
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6
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5 |
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10
= Highest Rating |
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Guest
Review by Rod
Barnett |
Lee
Van Cleef is one of the most recognizable actors in the spaghetti
western genre. If he'd done nothing more than turn in his fantastic
performances in For
a Few Dollars More and The
Good, the Bad & the Ugly he would have cemented his
place in fans' hearts. But those two genre-defining films were
just the beginning for Lee Van Cleef. A bit player in Hollywood
for years, he had never been able to land any really big starring
roles but a movie fan with sharp eyes can spot him in dozens
of films starting in 1952's High Noon.
He was the man tasked with shooting a radioactive bullet into
The Beast from
20,000 Fathoms, a gangster in several 1950s Noirs and seems
to have appeared in at least one episode of every western television
series produced in the '50s and '60s. His one starring role
in 'Hollywood' was as the deluded scientist who helps an alien
from Venus attack our planet in Roger Corman's It
Conquered the World in 1956. I'd love to know what he
thought his chances for career enhancement were when he signed
on to make westerns with crazy Italians but I bet Clint Eastwood's
sudden rise to stardom caused him to think big things were possible.
It certainly turned out well for him! After the huge success
of the Leone films worldwide LVC went on to star in at least
a dozen more westerns including two Sabata
films, the brilliant Death Rides a Horse,
the western/mystery hybrid The Grand Duel
and even a Magnificent Seven sequel.
With Take
a Hard Ride
Van Cleef entered into another sub-genre, the western/blaxploitation
combination —
a bizarre amalgam that deserves a book written about it though
it was woefully short-lived. This was also his second collaboration
with veteran Italian director Antonio Margheriti with whom he'd
made The Stranger and the Gunfighter
just the year before and would work with again in 1983 for Codename:
Wild Geese. While Take
a Hard Ride
wouldn't rank near the top of either man's resume it is a solid
movie even if its flaws are all too apparent and, all too often,
silly.
Since
they get the lion's share of screen time one could argue effectively
that the real stars of this film are Jim Brown (Black
Gunn) and Fred Williamson (The
Inglorious Bastards). Indeed, after a brief sequence at
the very start of the film to set up Van Cleef as cold-hearted
bounty hunter Kiefer, it becomes clear that the focus of the
tale will be Brown's character, Pike. Pike is the trusted right-hand
man of rancher Morgan (Dana Andrews), who has just gotten a
herd of cattle to market. The herd was a communal project for
the small Mexican town Morgan is hoping to help become a stable
ranching community. Sadly, the night after the sale the old
man dies of a heart attack and with his final breath asks Pike
to make sure the $86,000 gets back to the town. Pike takes this
responsibility seriously and sets out to keep his pledge even
as every criminally minded scumbag within 100 miles starts making
plans to rob him. Among these dastardly folks is professional
gambler and card cheat Tyree (Williamson). Being smarter than
the average crook he meets up with Pike and first helps him
fight off a group of bandits before informing him he wants the
money just as much as anyone else. But having formed a mutual
respect the two men decide to work together until they get to
Mexico when all bets will be off.
Bounty hunter Kiefer
decides to make a grab for the money but after witnessing the
gunplay skills Pike and Tyree possess he opts to pull most of
the criminals hunting for them into a group to have a better
chance. Offing the few that don't want to join up or running
them off the trail he follows along while the two black men
trade verbal quips and sniff after the other's possible breaking
points. In their trek across the desert landscape the two partners
come across a stage under attack by some bandits. Killing the
bad guys they rescue ex-prostitute Catherine (Catherine Spaak)
but are too late to save her good hearted husband. She elects
to travel with them until a town can be reached and in tow is
her servant/bodyguard Kashtok (Jim Kelly), a half-Indian mute
who appears to have studied under Bruce Lee. Will this group
of four be able reach civilization alive and with the money
or any combination of the two?
At one point Fred
Williamson's character Tryee says, "Everybody has a
sad story in their past." As
Take a Hard Ride goes
on we learn some of these sad stories and how they made the
people we are traveling with tick. Pike is a formerly bad man
trying to maintain his dignity even as Tyree asks him repeatedly
why he would want to keep his word to a white man. Tyree is
a man all too aware of the restrictions his black skin places
on him and while keeping a smile on his face plots to get what
he wants. Catherine is a sad lady unsure of her future and afraid
she'll not be able to leave her past behind. Kashtok is a man
of two different cultures who doesn't fit into either. And Kiefer
is a black-hearted, intelligent and rational man pursuing money
with little thought as to why. Placed into this scenario all
the flaws and strengths of these people come out leading to
some surprising actions. Even if certain sacrifices are never
going to be understood by the survivors the influence these
people have on each other will last a long time.
But I'm making this
out to be a glum tale and its not. Besides the banter between
Brown and Williamson there are some great chases, fantastic
gun battles and some well choreographed fights. Hollywood legend
Hal Needham was the stunt coordinator for the film and it shows
in the exciting and believable actions scenes. Director Margheriti
has all the elements in place to make a good western and does
a damned good job with the material. Margheriti's westerns never
reach the mindbending highs of Leone or Corbucci but he also
never seems to be aiming for those highs. His westerns are more
low-key, less arch with their pleasures usually more subtle
in their effect. I almost always enjoy a Margheriti western
more the second and third time I watch it. I fear this is because
I'm so used to Spaghettis being such 'big' entertainments that,
when I see one that aims at a different target, I have to adjust
my expectations to notice what's in front of me. That's not
to say Margheriti's films aren't entertaining — they're just
not entertaining in the same way that the often tongue-in-cheek
spaghettis sometimes are. I think this stylistic difference
accounts for the general low regard fans of the genre have for
his westerns, which is a shame. Watching this film more than
once shows a brilliance behind the camera that is easily missed
on first impression. Nearly every shot is framed with a skilled
eye to position each character in relation to the others for
an effect. Someone will be foregrounded at the beginning of
a scene as the character tries to argue against something and
then advance into frame becoming smaller as they lose the argument
until they are smallest object in the scene. This kind of thing
occurs repeatedly in Take
a Hard Ride, and even
if you don't notice it these techniques have their intended
effect. That's just excellent filmmaking and it's sadly rarely
talked about in this genre with its focus on action and violence.
Westerns can be artistic even if most aficionados would sneer
at the idea.
Another great thing
about this film is the beautiful location work. Filmed in the
Canary Islands off Morocco's coast, the movie looks fantastic
and forbidding at the same time. Being an Italian/American co-production,
there are more Hollywood players in the cast and crew that most
spaghettis usually sport. Besides the short performance from
Dana Andrews (Hot
Rods To Hell), there's a small part for Barry Sullivan and
juicy bad guy roles for recognizable character actors Harry
Carey, Jr. and Robert Donner. The score is by the brilliant
Jerry Goldsmith (The Blue
Max, Planet
of the Apes), who turns in a damned good suite of music
that I think I'll have to obtain on CD eventually.
Not that the film
is without problems. Most viewers will enjoy the rousing, explosive
final battle but will be unsatisfied with the fate of Lee Van
Cleef's Kiefer. I loved this odd, poetic turn but its 'scorpion-stinging-itself'
aspect will turn off those looking for a more conventional ending
for such a bad guy. Another troubling element is Kashtok the
mute halfbreed played by athlete Jim Kelly (Enter
the Dragon). Kelly does what he can with the role but the
inclusion of a martial arts bad ass makes it hard to take some
scenes seriously. High kicking like a Navajo Jackie Chan, it
becomes silly and throws off the tone of a few of the fight
scenes. The truth is that the film would have been just as good
and maybe better without this character at all. A simple rewrite
of a few scenes could have eliminated him altogether and made
Catherine's predicament in the desert even more troubling.
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| Anchor
Bay's DVD of Take
a Hard Ride is a very
good if bare bones way to see the film. The movie is presented
in 1.85 widescreen and is enhanced for 16X9 televisions. The picture
is generally sharp and clean with very few instances of damage
or flaws. It is a bit grainy at times but I suspect that is natural
for a film of this vintage. The audio presented is the English
dub which is perfect for a movie shot with a mostly American cast
& crew. The only extra is the trailer, which sells the film pretty
darned well.
4/22/09 |
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