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Once Upon a Time in the West
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Directed by Sergio Leone.
In Sergio Leone's epic Western, shot partly in Monument Valley, a revenge story becomes an epic contemplation of the Western past. To get his hands on prime railroad land in Sweetwater, crippled railroad baron Morton (Gabriele Ferzetti) hires killers, led by blue-eyed sadist Frank (Henry Fonda), who wipe out property owner Brett McBain (Frank Wolff) and his family. McBain's newly arrived bride, Jill (Claudia Cardinale), however, inherits it instead. Both outlaw Cheyenne (Jason Robards) and lethally mysterious Harmonica (Charles Bronson) take it upon themselves to look after Jill and thwart Frank's plans to seize her land. As alliances and betrayals mutate, it soon becomes clear that Harmonica wants to get Frank for another reason -- it has "something to do with death." As in his "Dollars" trilogy, Leone transforms the standard Western plot through the visual impact of widescreen landscapes and the figures therein. At its full length, Once Upon a Time in the West is Leone's operatic masterwork, worthy of its legend-making title. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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ZularianZularian Non-review review #3
by Zularian in Zularian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I am feeling a bit grumpy at the moment so I am going to revisit the subject of my first post -- that of a director pilfering through their own material. There are a number of excellent examples of this but I am going to limit myself to two directors. The reason for this is that both of these men, Robert Rodriguez and Kevin Smith have had a very large impact on me. My current career path has been shaped largely by these directors which is why their transgressions pain me so. First, Mr. Smith. Once upon a time there was a directory who made a crappy (production-wise) little movie called Clerks. It is not a pretty movie nor is it an interesting-looking film. Clerks has very few merits except the fact that it is quite funny and original and it somehow manages to convey the joy and exuberence of it's creator. There is a quality to Clerks, a "I just wanted to make a movie" attitude that is infectious. This film feels to me to emboy the very spirit of Charles Foster Kane in Citizen Kane ... " [More]
ShaunHustonShaunHuston AFI's 10 Top 10: Western
by ShaunHuston in ShaunHuston filmblog
hasn't rated it.
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"The Western Top 10 is the toughest for me. As some of you may know, while I'm hardly Richard Slotkin or Jane Tompkins, I write, teach, and think about this genre on a regular basis, and, as a result, my views are not only fairly strong, but well-informed. And, where certain well regarded classics are concerned, they are also iconoclastic. This is probably nowhere more obvious than with The Searchers (1956), the film that tops the AFI list. This film does not resonate with me on any level. I have never found the ending credible. John Wayne does not portray Ethan Edwards with any of the complexity needed for his embrace of Debbie (Natalie Wood) to ring true after his 118 (or so) minutes of hard, racist ranting about Native Americans and his intent to kill her. I also find the photography and production design to be garish without purpose, and for all of its superficial sophistication about Native peoples, the talk of ritual, the use of indigenous language, it only serves to perpetuat ... " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Recommended movies that you ...
by Jymkata in Viewing with a purpose
loved it.
"I really liked The Conformist but I can see where you're coming from. I just have a thing for films with that particular backdrop.A few friends recommeded Children Of Heaven to me and for the life of me, I just couldn't really stand it. I thought it was dry and a little too strait forward in it's approach to story-telling. [/quote]I also liked The Conformist the best out of all my Bertolucci experiences. If you are a Sopranos fan you can see a lot of inspiration for Adriana's death from this movie. I always respect Bertolucci's eye for cinema but his characters are always too messed up for me - psychologically, emotionally, and especially sexually. He also doesn't seem to get that less is sometimes more. However, I will always respect him for his writing contribution to one of my favorite cinematic masterpieces - Once Upon a Time in The West. " [More]
Smooth_JSmooth_J Part dos
by Smooth_J in Smooth_J Blog
loved it.
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"…of my list. I’m keeping the blurbs short on this one. 11. The Godfather Part 1 & 2 As close to perfect as films get. There is not much to be said about these films that hasn’t already been said. Completely timeless classics. 12. The Fisher King Another great Gilliam film. Robin William’s performance is amazing, as are Jeff Bridge’s and Mercedes Ruehl’s. The emotional power of this movie is phenomenal. 13. Children of Men Cuaron’s bleak vision of the future is excellently original. It is a poignant, provocative, and disturbing masterpiece. 14. The Departed I know it’s a little bit sloppy, but it’s just so fricken cool. The superb performances by the entire cast perfectly portray Monahan’s razor sharp script. 15. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Peter Jackson perfectly adapted Tolkien’s classic series and created a few of the most breathtaking movies ever put on film. 16. The Proposition Easily my ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog The Media Diet: Andrew Grant an ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"This week on The Media Diet, we check in with Andrew Grant and Aaron Hillis. Grant is the brain behind Filmbrain; Hillis is a freelance critic and reporter whose work can be found at Premiere, The Village Voice and his personal blog, Cinephiliac. Together, they’ve just launched Benten Films, a boutique DVD distribution company aimed at drawing attention to “overlooked gems that deserve greater recognition.” Benten’s first release, Joe Swanberg’s LOL, will hit stores on August 28 (more on that closer to the date). They’re also planning to release two films by Aaron Katz, Dance Party USA and Quiet City, sometime after both screen at The New Talkies festival in New York, which begins next week. SPOUT: We start each installment of The Media Diet with the old desert island question: you’re packing your suitcase for life-long seclusion on a tropical island that happens to have a full entertainment system. What records, books, movies, video games, websites, etc do you bring with? AARON: ... " [More]
paulpaul Top 5 westerns
by paul in paul on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"UnforgivenOnce Upon a Time in the WestHeaven's GateMcCabe and Mrs. MillerThe Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada Originally posted on:Schwinnfender " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms Top 5 Westerns
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
loved it.
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"1. Once Upon A Time In The West2. The Good, The Bad & The Ugly 3. The Searchers4. Rio Bravo5. The Wild Bunch " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms Top 5 Title Sequences
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
loved it.
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"I guess we could call this the Saul Bass Memorial List. Here goes.1. Vertigo (1958)2. Once Upon a Time in the West (1968)3. Se7en (1995)4. Fahrenheit 451 (1966)5. Cape Fear (1991) " [More]
paulpaul Re: Top 5 Character Introductions
by paul in Filmspotting
hasn't rated it.
"I recently watched Once Upon a Time in the West and Peter Fonda's entrance is pretty cinema-tastic.Scene: A family is massacred from unseen assasins. A boy runs out of his home to see his family dead in the yard. From the brush five sillhouetted men--cowboys in long dusters--emerge. The five black figures saunter toward the boy. The dark figure in front of the pack lifts his chin. Close-up on the brim of the hat raising and, boom, the sun hits Peter Fonda's piercing blue eyes. It doesn't get more showbiz than that. " [More]
WindbreakerWindbreaker Ain't no tragedy - I shot him. ...
by Windbreaker in Windbreaker!
loved it.
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""Ain't had no water since yesterday, Lord. Gettin' a little thirsty. Just thought I'd mention it. Amen." That touching prayer comes in the early moments of the movie, but those early 20 mins or so were the only excellent minutes. I'm a fan of all sorts of westerns. Don't have to be bloody, intellectual, comedic, whatever. They just have to be good. Overall Cable Hogue is borderline -- I'm sitting on the fence, so I rate it neutral. The story is simple: Cable Hogue is left in the desert to die, finds water, and makes himself a rich man because of it. The most potential in the story is the revenge theme. What will Hogue do if he ever spots those dastardly devils again? Slaughter them? Make them beg for their lives and then slaughter them? Or is he capable of forgiveness? Unfortunately, the revenge issue was ignored at times and rushed at others, so by the end I felt a little ripped off. The love story was solid. No complaints there.Final compla ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
One of numerous '60s revisionist Westerns, Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) turns a revenge story into a contemplation of the Western past. As in his "Dollars" trilogy, Leone transforms the standard Western plot through the visual impact of widescreen landscapes and the figures who populate them, as Harmonica appears out of nowhere and Frank chillingly commands the center of the frame. The opening credit sequence of three Western toughs (including Woody Strode and Jack Elam) preparing to kill someone at a train station artfully plays off Leone's fixation with faces and locales and the epic effect of his meticulous narrative pace. The sense of suspended time speaks to the concerns with past, future, and history that drive the plot; Jill oversees the literal tracks of "progress," while Frank is undone by the past he shares with memory-driven Harmonica. Among a number of "quotations" from classical Westerns, Henry Fonda's presence as the sadistic Frank and the Monument Valley location evoke the Western movie past of John Ford, as Leone exposes the dark reverse of Fonda's staunch Wyatt Earp in My Darling Clementine (1946). Ennio Morricone's haunting score emphasizes the elegiac, quasi-mystical atmosphere. After the success of the "Dollars" films starring Clint Eastwood, Paramount gave Leone the money to make his monumental saga as he wished. When the film opened to critical indifference and little business, Paramount chopped 25 minutes out to speed the pace, but to no financial avail. Leone's directorial career never quite recovered. Those 25 minutes, and Once Upon a Time in the West's critical stature, have since been restored; the film is now considered to be Leone's operatic masterpiece. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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