Theme: Desperado - Alice Cooper
Spoilers all the way.
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| Ever see a western actually do the tumbleweed from cartoons? You have now. |
Any Gun Can Play has my new favourite movie opening: three strangers ride into town. One is clearly meant to look like Clint Eastwood's Dollars character, another like Lee Van Cleef's (the third doesn't look anything like Eli Wallach but what are you gonna do?). They're hyped up with a succession of low angles and dramatic zooms into the frightened faces of townsfolk observing from their windows. This goes on for a few minutes.
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| The undertakers in these flicks must live like kings. |
Then they're suddenly killed by our surprise protagonist (George Hilton), who will be known henceforth as Stranger, which he tells us people call him, for he is too autistic to realise it's not a cool nickname; they just don't know who the fuck he is. Anyway, Stranger merking Sergio Leone's protags in effigy is the most hilariously spiteful way to ring in a movie since For Your Eyes Only, and is such a characteristically Mediterranean display of audacity that it makes me grin like a deranged retard (more).
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| "Psshh...nothin personnel...kid..." - actual dialogue. |
What makes this act of celluloid effrontery funnier still is that Gun rips off the Good the Bad and the Ugly formula so blatantly, like Enzo G. Castellari (of whom, needless to say, you have not heard) was telling Leone, "hey, nice template, kid, but seriously, this is how it's done". The fact the rest of Castellari's ouevre is Z-schlock like The New Barbarians makes this bravado more impudent still, which warms the single cockle of my walnut-sized heart. Never let it be said that Patrick H. Bastard does not root compulsively for the underdog.
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| He also made The Bronx Warriors, starring |
Yet, while immediate followup One Dollar Too Many lapsed too hard into slapstick silliness, Gun maintains an excellent heightened tone, making surrealistic genre satire with a straight face, like Twin Peaks or the early Bondkinos. It transcends the obvious and breaches that dream-realm of normative cinéma where neckbeards never reach. Sure, Gun is a spaghetti western satire, but, like Scream, it still feels like a real movie, which today's bathos-peddlers can never achieve (yeah, I'm talking about you, Rian Johnson).
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| Real movies look like this. |
Any Gun Can Play also stars Gilbert Roland as bandido Monetero, beside flagrantly Italian hottie Stefania Careddu, billed as Kareen O'Hara, as his Mexican moll (????).
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| "¿Faith and begorrah, gringo, where's me lucky charms? ¡Viva la raza! ¡Andale!" - Kareen O'Hara. |
Together with Edd Byrnes' defector from finance, these form the amoral triad/quadrangle that will variously team up and backstab one another for a haul of cash, leaving about 250,000 incidental goons dead in their wake. Since everyone in this movie is just as bad as everyone else, you're refreshingly free to choose who, if anyone, to root for, but Stranger alone is graced with an opening title theme song in the vein of classic westerns like 3:10 to Yuma but, I suspect, more directly inspired by the grandiose themes from James Bond kinos like Thunderball.
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| It even plays over a train montage, compounding the tism allegations. One of us! One of us! |
The only thing that makes this arguably not by far the GOAT spaghetti western is the unaccountable absence of Morricone music, but I won't dock it a star because you'll come away from it humming his Dollars scores anyway. Is that a fair way to rate movies? Who cares? Watch Any Gun Can Play, you stupid fucking asshole.




















































