Spagvemberfest 2022 - the legend continues

Day 5

Dynamite Joe (1967)

Joe l’implacabile - The Spaghetti Western Database (spaghetti-western.net)

DJ2

Antonio Margheriti’s first foray into the genre but those expecting another Vengeance or And God Said to Cain will be sorely disappointed. Star Rik Van Nutter, most famous for playing James Bond’s CIA buddy Felix Leiter in 1965’s Thunderball, gets his turn at playing the lady’s man government agent in this one and his weapon of choice is pretty easy to guess.

Margheriti seemed to have a decent budget to work with for this one, at least by spaghetti western standards, and while it is far from being his best work, I found this quasi-comedy to be surprisingly entertaining.

5 Likes

Day 5: Cjamango
Sorry when this entry is a bit to negative. It is ok to watch once, but I don’t think I will watch it again soon. Ordinary Spaghetti without any mentionable features and no point where i identified with any of the characters. Quality of Koch rainbow DVD is bellow average. There will be a Blu Ray release in Germany by White Pearl Classics / Daredo in December, but I don’t see any reason to buy it.

6 Likes

#5 Carnimeo: Moment to Kill
-German bluray has such a varying quality that I almost gave up just during the awful looking title scene, fortunately it’s mostly good enough. This is a film I always seem to remember better as it really is. I like Walter Barness with his shotgun though. 5/10

8 Likes

Day 5 - The Sheriff of Rockspring (1971) Mario Sabatini

Never did I think I’d find anything close to Crea level crap, but here we are. This poorly made hack job is not only awful in the technical sense, but it features NOBODY GETTING SHOT!!! Why in the hell would they make such a ridiculous decision for a western? Needless to say, it’s boring as all hell. The only quality it has is it’s score, stolen from “Go With God Gringo”. This is the danger of being a completist.

9 Likes

Well, I managed to stay awake for all of ‘The Good, The Bad and The Ugly’ last night…it was just the tonic that I needed. Many thanks to all the folks who sent their condolences re: my brother. Truly, sincerely, and gratefully appreciated.

This afternoon, I’m going to watch ‘SABATA’ (1969), another of my all-time favourites.

A romp-a-minute adventure featuring Lee Van Cleef at his coolest, William Berger at his most devious, Franco Ressel at his most dastardly, Pedro Sanchez at his most annoying, and the gorgeous Linda Veras at her most delectable.

Throw in more twists and turns than the Monaco Grand Prix, a magnificent music score by Marcello Giombini, engaging direction by Gianfranco Parolini (Frank Kramer), and you are in for one hell of a good time…Spaghetti style.

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Explosive pasta at its best; and, IMHO, the best of the ‘Sabata’ trilogy by far…

11 Likes

I totally agree, the first one is great fun! LVC is excellent, Berger is excellent, the soundtrack is excellent . . .

1 Like

Day 4 - Navajo Joe
This one is probably in the bottom half of my top 20 spaghettis. The action scenes that Burt Reynolds complained about hold up as frenetic and excited. Sergio Corbucci nearly always delivers and this one is probably as good as a simplistic revenge western can be. Morricone’s score is shrill but melodramatic in the best ways. I’d love to see a new Blu-ray release of this that goes farther than Kino’s with more restoration. The Kino audio commentary was informative but had a lot of down time with no speaking.

Day 5 - Django the Bastard
The opening theme for this Gothic western is superb! It is criminally underused throughout the movie, though, and most of the score is bland. Sadly, the movie itself is style over substance, and while the first five minutes are immediately captivating, but then there’s this dragged out, silly dynamite tossing game scene, and the rest of the movie fluctuates. Whenever Anthony Steffen’s phantom-like Django is on screen the pacing picks up. The showdown at the end feels dramatic and worth the hundred-minute wait.

7 Likes

DAY 5

I drew no.20 from my Box O’ Fate today, and that’s a slab of fair-to-middling Van Cleefery in the form of The Grand Duel (Santi, 1972). Wow, between the lot of us this SpagvemberFest feels like it’s becoming a bit of a VanCleefyFest, doesn’t it? I’m not complaining of course. For me, LVC is the Spag Daddy. The Grand Duel is not my favourite from him by a long shot, but it’s a decent enough ride, certainly enough for it to be a Spagvember stalwart for me most years. And of course it earns a million brownie points for being a real and proper spag in the “parody spag” age. #PhilipVermeerIsInnocent

10 Likes

xD I can’t belive you just called him that!

I need to dedicate a month for a LVC Fest. JuLee? Cleefember? :thinking: …sounds like a Pokémon

5 Likes

Spagvember Fest Day 5

Dio Non Paga Il Sabato

https://www.spaghetti-western.net/index.php/Dio_non_paga_il_sabato

Re-watch. A slow burn SW that has a solid payoff at the finale that makes the slow burn worth it. I’m surprised it’s never been a contender for the Alternative Top 20. I’m not sure if Tanio Boccia aka Amerigo Anton had intended the film as an allegory for what gold does to the wicked, but he certainly gave that impression with the gang slowly imploding on itself as the film progresses.

I do wish Rod Dana had more screen time as Randell though, he was kinda underused in the film, though when we do see him, he’s really good as a villain. Larry Ward was pretty good as the unlikely and unusual hero in this one, and is another actor I think could’ve gone far in the genre had he stuck around a little longer.

Furio Mencioni was great as Braddock, and is extra good in the scene where he gets shot up by Rod Dana. He’s one of a few Italian character players that I felt didn’t get enough opportunities at bigger roles.

I sure do hope Koch makes this one a part of their new line in 2023 as the DVD is fine, but a new restoration wouldn’t hurt.

9 Likes

Day 5

Old Shatterhand

As usual I pick one Winnetou movie for this event. This one got Guy Madison which was a nice add. These movies require specific mood, still I’m finding them enjoyable.

9 Likes

Day 6: ¿Quien sabe?
Known as first Zapata western. Damiano did not agree this is a western, but it is at least a agent movie in Spaghetti style! Typical Bacalov score, two anti heroes Chuncho and El Nino, close-ups, brutally and merciless. There is Chuncho stealing guns and selling them to revolutionaries. You might think he is doing this for mexican revolution, but he is always out for himself first. And there is El Nino, a gringo with unclear goals for a long time. He manipulates people and plays them off against each other. He would sell his mother for gold. There is some kind of friendship between both. Just at the end when Chuncho realizes what disrespect El Nino shows to hard working but poor mexican people and how El Nino tricks him, Chuncho shoots him down. In a supporting role Klaus Kinski plays a choleric and shooting priest. Perfect casting!
Very enjoyable, fantastic cast, a must-see Spaghetti!

7 Likes

DAY 6:

El hombre de Rio Malo (1971) - Director: Eugenio Martin - 2/10

Like the title says, it is bad. It is such a shame that such a good cast goes to waste, James Mason is severely underused in particular; the film stresses its tongue-in-cheek nature insofar as it becomes distracting, which vitiates the whole effort in the process. The aforementioned drawback is not exactly remedied by the fact that the characters stay largely vague and the movie fails to establish any of them to a satisfactory degree, forcing a precipitate pace and a fleeting narrative focus with more and more turnabouts as well as set pieces being pelted at the audience.

It lacks the solid, well-rounded structure of such capers as Five Man Army and exhibits some serious issues with pacing; with its prevalent superficiality, it is reminiscent more of a pilot for a TV series than a feature-length film of a cinematic scope. Regrettably, the said faults are additionally compounded by film’s steadily accruing ineptitude and utterly horrendous soundtrack. While you can discern the higher budget in the way some shootouts are staged and whatnot, the directing and the editing are rather lame for something with such a hefty roster filled with such heavyweights. Everything appears misaligned and the overall structure feels disjointed, badly pieced together and messed up. Out of the big-budgeted spaghetti productions, it’s one of the worst works in my book.

Lola Colt (1967) - Director: Siro Marcellini - 3/10

In the end, I got pretty much the kind of farrago I had anticipated: the gallimaufry features a musical part sporting the black heroine, Lola’s character arc adumbrating some vestiges of a revenge motif, a bit of a romance/drama plotline in which Peter Martell takes part as well as more of a regular western storyline about an imperious landlord terrorizing the local town, all of which is rolled into one big flapjack of a motion picture, the final result is as flat as a flapjack too. In addition to the aforesaid so-so mixture, the movie has some middling directing plus an unremarkable soundtrack both of which affirm work’s humdrum stature.

The style is reminiscent of the kind of stuff you would see in those Americanized, early period genre examples: not particularly bad, but nothing outstandingly original or memorable either. The latter factor accounts for why this outing is not especially absorbing to watch; simply put, this whole potpourri might have worked better on the purely poppy level if it had boasted a more flamboyant rendition and finish. At the end of the day, it just gets bogged down in its stillborn attempts at fusing all these divergent themes, eventually lacking both in terms of style and substance.

10 Likes

It was very kind of the producers to give Bad Man’s River a rating in just the first word of its title :joy:

2 Likes

Day 6

The Big Gundown (1966)

Resa dei conti, La - The Spaghetti Western Database (spaghetti-western.net)

BG

It is Sunday morning so that makes it a great time for a re-watch of the Italian release of a classic. This movie is an example of film making at its best and it never fails to mesmerize me every time I watch it.

8 Likes

Day 6 - “Mestizo” Julio Buchs

What begins as a typical revenge spaghetti western soon becomes an adventure film with epic battle scenes set in Canada. The fort action scenes are very impressive and show the film had a huge budget for such an obscure title. To my surprise, the film’s theme sounds very spag-ish. Despite that, the film is somewhat weak and doesn’t really have that spaghetti flavor.

Just like that I’ve seen every spaghetti western ever sold as a Django film, some of it was great, some of it was tortuous, most of it was alright, like this one was.

7 Likes

Day 6

Return of Sabata (1971)

Currently at home and feeling quite ill so I don’t currently have access to the spags I had downloaded for the fest so I’m turning to rewatches of my blu-rays. Return of Sabata is such a guilty pleasure for me. I adore the goofy theme tune and I love Cleef in this one. The plot is bananas and all the characters are so silly but at the same time it also feels really well made. The great giallo-like lighting in the opening scene is fab and the film has a constant use of cool camera shots.

8 Likes

Spagvemberfest 2022

Day 5

Sabata (Parolini / 1969)

Seemed like the perfect Spag for a Saturday afternoon and so it proved. Always been an old favourite of mine and still remains very enjoyable in a semi bonkers way. LVC is supercool. Franco Ressel one of my all time favourite Spaggie bad guys. And a stand out scene I had somewhow forgotten when William Berger (Banjo) has a relationship commitment nightmare dream. :rofl:

9 Likes

Spagvemberfest 2022

Day 6

Return of Sabata (Parolini / 1971)

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And so it seemed an obvious to make it a Sabata weekend and Sunday afternoon was a good fit for this one although, as is often the case with Sunday afternoons, I struggled to stay awake in places. Actually enjoyed this one more than previous despite that though although it is a long way short of the original in my book. Isabella Incontrera never looked better too.

9 Likes

DAY 6

I drew no.26 today, which means that my draw at sundown has brought me a Duel in the Eclipse: the delightfully bonkers Requiem For Gringo (Merino, 1968), featuring a host of boss-level baddies, a Tarantino-style fractured narrative, an eclipse, and a bloke in a leopard-print shawl. Grrrrrrrrrrowl!

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8 Likes