The Magnificent Texan review: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 10:40, 25 November 2019

Magnifico texano.jpg


|Trennlinie01.jpg |- |Director:

  • Luigi Capuano

Cast:

  • Glenn Saxson
  • Massimo Serato
  • Beni Deus
  • Barbara Loy
  • Luis Induni
  • Giorgio Cerioni
  • Gloria Osuna
  • Nerik Berkoff
  • Fulvia Franco
  • Mirella Pamphili
  • Anna Miserocchi

Music:

  • Francesco De Masi

Screenplay:

  • Oberdan Trojani
  • (Accredited to Pablo Ripoll)

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THE MAGNIFICENT TEXAN

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The Magnificent Texan (Il Magnifico Texano)

See Database Page

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In the opening minutes, a home of a Mexican family is attacked by a group of bandits. They burn down the house and kill all the people inside - at least that's what they (and all others) think, but one boy, the eleven year old Manuel manages to escape. Years later Manuel returns to the region incognito: his face half-covered, a poncho over his shoulders. Of course he was traumatized by the sight of his parents being killed and his home being burnt down, so all he's got on his mind is revenge. But there's also the lovely Evelyn, his sweetheart from the past, who thought he was killed in the fire, but never stopped thinking about him. Yes, they were only eleven years old, but it was more than just a puppy love ...


A romantic, highly melodramatic spaghetti western? Why not. The story about the boy turned avenger, whose mission is complicated by a romantic subplot, seems to have some potential. We soon find out that corruption and racial prejudice were at the base of things, and that is was Evelyn's father, the greedy judge Wilkins, who masterminded the massacre. Racial prejudice, a family feud, love among the ruins - what we got here, looks like the perfect ingredients for a Shakespearean spaghetti western; it could - no should - have all worked, but frankly: it doesn't. The opening scene with the burning house and the boy witnessing the massacre, will remind genre fans of the gruesome opening of Death Rides a Horse. Afterwards, we soon hark back to the days of Zorro-like crusaders bringing justice to the border region of Mexico and the US. Our man - knick-named El Desperado - is wearing a poncho to suggest some of that Clint Eastwoord kind of coolness, but behind that black handkerchief and smeary make-up , he's no other than a Mexican nobleman defending the people of the land against tyrannical officials and other villains. "No Desperado", one the Mexicans (lined up to be hanged) shouts when El Desperado rides into town unarmed, "if you turn yourself in, we lose everything!"

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Capuano directed three Zorro movies in the early sixties, and this movie looks and feels like one, even if there are no swords and the character is put on a revenge mission. The rich people are dressed in the style of the Spanish nobility from the colonial era (even Evelyn, whose supposed to be American) and one of the more positive characters (the wife of the corrupt judge) is presented as a devoted catholic. The dirty atmosphere and anti-clerical tones of many a spaghetti are totally absent. As a result this is a very clean, good-natured spaghetti western; for most part it doesn't feel like a spaghetti western at all, but luckily we get some gratuitous violence near the end. The only movie from the golden period which bears some resemblance to The Magnificent Texan, is the odd Starblack. Without being outstanding, the Robert Woods vehicle is by far the better of these two oddities.


The film was entirely shot on Italian soil; for commercial reasons the cinematography was accredited to a Spanish cameraman, but in reality it was shot by Oberdan Trojani, who did quite a good job (1). The interiors and night scenes shot in the (not so familiar) De Paolis Studios western town are particularly fine, but Trojani couldn't do much with those sandpits and grasslands, other than opt for a high camera position, in order to avoid anachronistic backgrounds. Glenn Saxson did quite well in a couple of other spaghettis, but here he seems completely out of place. Admittedly, neither the make-up nor the poncho are a great help. Apart from Luis Induni and Massimo Serato there are no familiar faces. Serato plays a character called Blackie and has adopted the actor's name of John Barracuda for the occasion (nevertheless his performance lacks bite). De Masi's score must be great if you like De Masi (I'm not a fan), but it sounds suspiciously familiar.



Note:

  • (1) Marco Giusti, Dizionario del western all'italiana

--By Scherpschutter

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