The Relentless Four Review: Difference between revisions

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[[Quattro inesorabili, I|See Database Page]]
[[Quattro inesorabili, I|See Database Page]]


The relentless four are four bounty hunters who are looking for the same man as a Texas Ranger, but for different reasons: the bounty hunters are after the prize put on his head, the Ranger wants to tell him he’s no longer a wanted man. The bounty hunters catch up with the man first, with tragic results ... When they’re told how things are, they nevertheless try to collect the reward money, and when the Ranger thwarts their plans, they’ll frame him for the murder of a cattle baron, so he’ll become a wanted man and they will be able to collect the reward ...
The relentless four are four bounty hunters who are looking for the same man as a Texas Ranger, but for different reasons: the bounty hunters are after the prize on his head, the Ranger wants to tell him he’s no longer a wanted man. The bounty hunters catch up with the man first, with tragic results ... When they’re told how things are, they nevertheless try to collect the reward money, and when the Ranger thwarts their plans, they’ll frame him for the murder of a cattle baron, so he’ll become a wanted man and they will be able to collect the reward ...




This movie belongs to the first output of the eurowestern genre, generally referred to as the ''pre-Leone stage''. It was made in 1965, one year after Leone’s first western, but the hero is still a lawman and the bounty hunters are still presented as scavengers, not as people satisfying a possible need (but note that the movie is named after them, not after the Texas Ranger; a title like ''Il Ranger Magnifico/The Magnificent Stranger'' would have been a more logical choice). Virtually all elements that made (and still make) the spaghetti western genre popular are absent and the atmosphere is closer to the kind of B-movies John Wayne appeared in before he became a major star.   
This movie belongs to the first output of the eurowestern genre, generally referred to as the ''pre-Leone stage''. It was made in 1965, one year after Leone’s first western, but the hero is still a lawman and the bounty hunters are still presented as scavengers, not as people satisfying a possible need (but note that the movie is named after them, not after the Texas Ranger; I wonder why it wasn't called ''Il Ranger Magnifico/The Magnificent Stranger''). Virtually all elements that made (and still make) the spaghetti western genre popular are absent and the atmosphere is closer to the kind of B-movies John Wayne appeared in before he became a major star.   




The feeling of goofiness is magnified by the fact that the Texas Ranger is played by Adam West, the actor who played '''Batman''' in the life action TV-series from the Sixties. For fans of the series (and I’m one) West’s appearance in the movie will be a major disappointment; without his Batman suit the slender West looks frail, almost effeminate - and that pink shirt doesn’t help at all (it could suggest homosexual undertones, but it’s probably all unintentional (1)). To make things worse, his voice was dubbed; he has been given a low, husky voice, most probably to make him sound more like a traditional western hero; we therefore miss his distinctive, instantly recognizable articulation which turned West’s Batman into a convincing superhero.  
The feeling of goofiness is magnified by the fact that the Texas Ranger is played by Adam West, the actor who played '''Batman''' in the life action TV-series from the Sixties. For fans of the series (and I’m one) West’s appearance in the movie will be a major disappointment; without his Batman suit the slender West looks frail, almost effeminate - and that pink shirt doesn’t help at all (1). To make things worse, his voice was dubbed; he has been given a low, husky voice, most probably to make him sound more like a traditional western hero; we therefore miss his distinctive, instantly recognizable articulation which turned West’s Batman into a convincing superhero.  




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'''''Note:'''''
'''''Note:'''''


(1) Pink was a popular color in hippie and underground circles, but it was commonly associated with tenderness, sweetness, romance, etc. It might have been interpreted as a counter culture symbol, but it wasn’t associated specifically with homosexuality. Originally the pink triangle was one of the Nazi concentration camp badges, used to identify homosexual prisoners, but the triangular symbol and its color were only reclaimed by gay rights movements in the course of the Seventies.  
(1) It made me wonder if it was a sign of a possible homosexual context; Freudian themes, such as repressed homosexuality, were popular among film makers in those days, but it seems unlikely; pink was a popular color in hippie and underground circles, but it was commonly associated with tenderness, sweetness, romance, not with homosexuality, at least not specifically. Originally the '''pink triangle''' was one of the Nazi concentration camp badges, used to identify homosexual prisoners, but the triangular symbol and its ''color'' were only reclaimed by gay rights movements in the course of the Seventies.  




--By [[User:Scherpschutter|Scherpschutter]]
--By [[User:Scherpschutter|Scherpschutter]]

Revision as of 09:02, 21 October 2014

The Relentless Four (I Quattro Inesorabili)

See Database Page

The relentless four are four bounty hunters who are looking for the same man as a Texas Ranger, but for different reasons: the bounty hunters are after the prize on his head, the Ranger wants to tell him he’s no longer a wanted man. The bounty hunters catch up with the man first, with tragic results ... When they’re told how things are, they nevertheless try to collect the reward money, and when the Ranger thwarts their plans, they’ll frame him for the murder of a cattle baron, so he’ll become a wanted man and they will be able to collect the reward ...


This movie belongs to the first output of the eurowestern genre, generally referred to as the pre-Leone stage. It was made in 1965, one year after Leone’s first western, but the hero is still a lawman and the bounty hunters are still presented as scavengers, not as people satisfying a possible need (but note that the movie is named after them, not after the Texas Ranger; I wonder why it wasn't called Il Ranger Magnifico/The Magnificent Stranger). Virtually all elements that made (and still make) the spaghetti western genre popular are absent and the atmosphere is closer to the kind of B-movies John Wayne appeared in before he became a major star.


The feeling of goofiness is magnified by the fact that the Texas Ranger is played by Adam West, the actor who played Batman in the life action TV-series from the Sixties. For fans of the series (and I’m one) West’s appearance in the movie will be a major disappointment; without his Batman suit the slender West looks frail, almost effeminate - and that pink shirt doesn’t help at all (1). To make things worse, his voice was dubbed; he has been given a low, husky voice, most probably to make him sound more like a traditional western hero; we therefore miss his distinctive, instantly recognizable articulation which turned West’s Batman into a convincing superhero.


This doesn’t mean that this movie is a complete failure; the plot may be conventional, even trite, but the finale is well-handled; the script manages to squeeze some excitement out of a seemingly predictable situation of our hero being hanged in front of the townspeople; there is no Blondie to shoot the rope, so how on earth is he going to survive the hanging? Is he a kind of Houdini? (The explanation is by the way quite funny). The movie is also well-shot, on various locations throughout Spain (most of them in the region of Madrid). In the end the fist fights are the biggest drawback, they occasionally look so fake that you’d almost expect those cartoon messages like *poing* or *whap* to appear when West hits his opponents (that is: missing them by a few inches).


Apart from West we also get those two actors who always seem to be in those early genre outings, Claudio Undari (as the most relentless of the villains) and Luis Undini (as the dutiful sheriff) plus a number of household names, most of them in minor or even non-speaking roles. Paola Barbara gives new meaning to the term resentment as the widow who’s even more relentless than the four men from the title: he’s willing to pay a large reward to anyone who brings him the murderer of her husband alive, so she can watch him being hanged ...



Note:

(1) It made me wonder if it was a sign of a possible homosexual context; Freudian themes, such as repressed homosexuality, were popular among film makers in those days, but it seems unlikely; pink was a popular color in hippie and underground circles, but it was commonly associated with tenderness, sweetness, romance, not with homosexuality, at least not specifically. Originally the pink triangle was one of the Nazi concentration camp badges, used to identify homosexual prisoners, but the triangular symbol and its color were only reclaimed by gay rights movements in the course of the Seventies.


--By Scherpschutter

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