Saturday, December 10, 2011

Watching "Death Rides a Horse" Again and Again

I fell in love with Giulio Petroni's 1967 masterpiece a couple years ago watching a terrible DVD version (probably copied from some worn out old VHS tape).  The color on the copy was destroyed, the picture was hacked for TV and, I sat there stunned by this amazing movie.

Last week I watched the old hacked up version again and just loved it.  And, last night, for the first time, I saw a clean crisp widescreen version of the movie. 
 All I can say is "wow!" 

The whole amazing film came to life with color and life.  It is one of those movies that gets better every time you see it.  There is a reason "Death Rides a Horse" is found in most Top Ten spaghetti western lists (SWDBQuentin Tarantino's).

"Death Rides a Horse" is a fantastic revenge story of about a boy who watches bandits kill his father then rape and murder his mother and sister.  He grows up to be a gun fighter (of course) and sets about hunting down the bad guys.  The films stars Lee Van Cleef (THE quintessential bad ass) and John Phillip Law.

I watched the MGM DVD release which appears to be hard to find.

Reviews of the 2011 Wild East Productions release say its stunning as well; I have it on order. 

When reading reviews of spaghetti westerns on Amazon.com, you tend to see a LOT of complaints about the old copies (bad picture and cropping) of these movies.  Me?  I love them.  Its like listening to vinyl LP records; they have all the flaws we used to get watching these movies, late at night, on broadcast UHF channels. If you want the "old school" experience, you should also pick up Spaghetti Westerns 20 Movie Pack from Amazon.com; its only $9.00.  For that price, you just aren't going to have more fun.

The only thing that puzzles me is how the Americans got "Death Rides a Horse" for the Italian "Man to Man" (Da uomo a uomo)  The Italian title is much better.

More on "Death Rides a Horse" from SWDB (lots of reviews and links at the bottom of this page) and IMDB.

Louis Stone-Collonge
stonecollonge@gmail.com

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Blindman

The blind hero is a rare, but not unknown, heroic trope seen through out history.  No matter how ridiculous it may seem, it is what it is.

I liked Blindman because it had enough rather original elements to keep things interesting.  It has a blind heroic(ish) gun fighter.  It has a damsel in distress.  It has the classic spaghetti bad guy (this time using the well worn Mexican bandit trope).  This movie also has 50 mail order brides who have been kidnapped and who need rescuing (well, because the blind gun fighter has a contract to deliver them to some miners, of course).

Yea, re-reading that paragraph, it does seem a little odd to me too.  Still, watching the movie you go along for the ride for reasons which are entirely unexplainable.

When I "over think" this movie it looks not unlike Return of the Jedi.  The Blindman is Luke.  The damsel is Leia (a stretch). The evil Mexican bandit is Darth Vader.  The 50 mail order brides are the Ewoks.  Sorry, I thought it so I wrote it.

Blindman is a standard quality B-level spaghetti western with enough oddness to keep you interested.  Along with the standard heaps of gun play and explosions.

Blindman was released in 1971 and was directed by Ferdinando Baldi (The Forgotten Pistolero and Texas, Adios).

Okay, I have to make the obligatory comment about the fact that Ringo Starr is in this movie.  Here it is: Thank GOD he has few and very short lines.  Ick!  Nuff said.

The version of this film I have is on a DVD called "Gunslinger Western Collection."  While I have not seen all the movies in this 2-disk set, the copy of Blindman is decent; fan-freakin-tastic for $6.98 on Amazon.com.

Check out the review on FistFullofPasta.com and IMDB.com.

Also, find more info at Spaghetti Western Database (we like them).

Louis Stone-Collonge
stonecollonge@gmail.com