Note: This essay appears at Wonders in the Dark as part of the Top 50 Westerns Countdown, placing at #45.
It wasn’t the first spaghetti western, but A Fistful of Dollars was certainly the one that really put
the whole sub-genre on the map. This is the film that synthesized several key
ingredients that would make the spaghetti western into influential cinema,
namely the iconic “Man with No Name”….aka Clint Eastwood who dishes out hefty
doses of justice and deadpan humor. There is also the presence of Ennio
Morricone, who wrote so many fabulous scores for several spaghetti westerns and
is nearly synonymous with the sub-genre, who provides a clanging and lilting
score that in its own way, is as memorable and jaunty as anything he ever
wrote. And of course the assured direction from Sergio Leone, whose confidence
in what he was doing seems to ooze from just about every scene in the film.
These three together helped take the spaghetti western from its low budget
roots and turned it into a western revival, with a legacy and influence that
has seemed to transcend the western altogether.
Although Leone would go on to create more lavishly
spectacled and densely thematic works (particularly his magnificent Once Upon a Time in the West), there is
a certain appeal in the taut economy of storyline here in A Fistful of Dollars. As “The Man with
No Name” (Clint Eastwood) rides into a border town near Mexico, he is told of
the local feud between two families, the Rojo clan, led by the evil Ramon (a
deliciously vile Gian Maria Volonte), and the Baxters, led by Sheriff Baxter.
The Man with No Name determines he can profit off of this feud by facilitating
the escalating violence and looking for ways of exploiting the situation. He
winds up in the middle of some controversy when he sees some gold being stolen
by Ramon and his gang, whereupon he sells information to both families to get
them to engage in a fight over the “survivors” of the massacre. While this is
going on, TMWNN learns of a woman named Marisol who is being held captive by
Ramon, keeping her from her husband and small boy. TMWNN finds a way to free
her from her captors, but Ramon and crew find out about this and soon beat him
to a pulp (I’m not sure which film Eastwood looks worse in….this one after the
beating or in The Good, The
Bad, and The Ugly after
the walk through the desert with Eli Wallach). Through pluck and ingenuity, he
escapes, and as Ramon believes the Baxters are hiding him, he and his gang set
fire to the Baxter house and murder the entire family. TMWNN heals up and
returns to town to exact revenge upon Ramon and rid the town of the Rojo clan
in a fantastic showdown.
It’s well known that this film borrows
significantly from the plot of Yojimbo,
Akira Kurosawa’s wonderful 1961 work that already was borrowing on iconography
of westerns to begin with. A Fistful of
Dollars is basically
a remake of Yojimbo,
and in fact Toho films sued Leone and the producers for the Asian rights to the
film after they saw it and determined how much it borrowed from their film.
During the early 60’s, in fact, the melding of the samurai concept and the
western had already occurred a few years earlier in the blockbuster western, The Magnificent Seven (based on The Seven Samurai). But, Leone adds so
many of his own elements to the film. First and foremost, was getting Clint
Eastwood to play the lead, who at the time was mostly known for his work in the Rawhide TV series. Eastwood came to Italy,
without being able to speak any Italian, and in fact was making very little
money on this low budget film. One of the key elements for why I think Eastwood
is so effective in this film and the entire Dollars trilogy, is that he doesn’t
do anything quickly. He moves slowly. Eastwood even talks as if he’s just
awakened from a nap. It's not quite a whisper, but not really projecting
either. Everything with Eastwood is smooth and subtle, highlighting a
hyper-cool machismo…..he’s cool and he knows it. But the effect of all this
languorous moving and talking, is that the action moments come across as that
much more impactful. He moves deliberately and smooth and slow with everything
he does, except when he shoots….and Leone often makes a point of showing us his
hands as he shoots the gun as this is the only time he moves with any quickness
whatsoever. Eastwood’s deadpan humor also goes a long way here, allowing
him to subvert his own approach and keep the pastiche from getting too thick.
Eastwood’s emblematic portrayal of The Man with No Name, adds to what I
consider to be a critical element of the spaghetti western, which is the
meditation on the masculine identity. In Eastwood’s Man with No Name, we have
the ideal personification of a man who asks for nothing, needs nothing and
relies upon only himself for sustenance, using ingenuity, skill, and his sly
humor to get him through. It is Eastwood's alone-ness and self sufficiency that
recalls classics of the western genre, but in this case, there is a
self-awareness subverting the traditional intent. This is a quality that would
come up not just in other Leone films, but in many of the great spaghetti
westerns, particularly those from Corbucci, like Django, and The Mercenary. Just about the only
glimpse into The Man’s past is after he helps the family, the woman asks…“Why
do you do this for us?”. He replies,“Why? Cause I knew someone like you once
and there was no one there to help." Leone also plays upon reference
points of western culture and iconography, elevating the images, the
characters, and the sounds into a kind of reflexive mythology, incorporating
elements from other westerns, most often recalling George Stevens' Shane. Speaking of sounds, Morricone's
soundtrack here is loaded with what sounds like noises....whistles and clanging
things that give a sort of caricatured personality to the proceedings. Leone
and Morricone were always on some kind of miraculous level. Yes the music isn't
as iconic as in The Good, the
Bad, and the Ugly, but the understated and comedic
matter-of-factness of the score here fits very well with Leone's more simple
approach in this film. In addition to the music, the visuals are rife with
close-ups and attention-grabbing widescreen framing, reflecting the self
awareness inherent to the spaghetti subgenre, as it reflects a post-western
consciousness. A Fistful of
Dollars isn't just a
western..... it's a western that knows it's
a western.
In a significant supporting role, Gian Maria
Volonte is Ramon, the personification of evil. His evil is best seen in the
sequence where he massacres the Mexican army with the Gatling gun and there’s
this certain way that he grimaces with pleasure every time he shoots the gun.
There’s also that dark, violent and nasty set piece where Ramon’s crew burns
down the Baxter house and massacres the family, including Baxter’s wife in cold
blood. Eastwood is watching the whole massacre from his concealed location in the
coffin after he got beat up. This sets up a brilliant denouement where Eastwood
not only wants revenge for Ramon’s treatment of him, but also their full-on
display of evil incarnate, setting up a herculean confrontation where Eastwood
must take on Ramon and his whole clan (Not without some help from a protective
bullet proof breastplate). In the final showdown, Leone pulls together all the
elements that would become iconic about the spaghetti western…. the drawn out
suspense, the machismo and taunting, the sweaty close-ups, the clanging score,
the art of surprise. A Fistful of
Dollars must be
recognized historically and cinematically for what it represents and what it
popularized. True there are better spaghetti westerns, but few are as
unassuming and compact as this one can be, as Eastwood’s understated humor and
the short running time seem to reflect a “less is more” approach that I find
immensely likable.
1 comment:
Again, a great review, one of the gems of the current western countdown. And a classic film of course.
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