TrueJoshNight
Truly Dreadful Film
Laikals
The greatest movie ever made..!
NekoHomey
Purely Joyful Movie!
Tayyab Torres
Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
alexmatte
It's not (just) how good you are in life but what language you speak or where you are from... or whether you can get your product out there or not. If the Duomo di Monreale was in Rome or Florence or Paris it would be regarded as just about the greatest church in Christendom... but it is just outside Palermo in Sicily, so who cares? Dutch anthropologists apparently came up with symbolism over a generation before Levi-Strauss, but who reads Dutch? Australian films pre-war were some of the best in the world... before the US film studios stitched up distribution and killed them all off. And who cares what rubbish your fizzy carbonated drink is, as long as it is the only one which gets distributed?Likewise it is with this gem of a cartoon Western, as fabulous at satirising the genre as all the Italian spaghetti Westerns of its time, most of the most famous of which it should vastly outrank in reputation. But it doesn't, and barely exists as a distant footnote in cinema history. Italy was not remotely a cartooning power like the US or Czechoslovakia, so how could they make a fabulous full-length cartoon Western spoof? In fact, it is memorably good - I saw it as a child and am still impressed over 40 years later - and mixes serious plot with parody. It is that clever mixture of proper Western drama with an unmistakable cartoon satire which ultimately gives it its winning character. The inevitable final gunslinging shootout in the street is pure genius, and so much more clever and artful than so many of the equivalent "psychological" studies which some famous spaghetti Westerns are legendary for.One of the many obscure films which would constantly be celebrated if only they had and had had a wider audience.
MARIO GAUCI
A Christmas-time staple on Italian TV for years and only the third animated feature to emanate from Italy (after 1949's THE SINGING PRINCESS and THE DYNAMITE BROTHERS). A delightful if patchy parody of the Western that is well-suited to the rough, stylized animation on display and featuring a handful of superbly realized and voiced characters particularly the belatedly introduced laconic gunfighter hero Johnny and the land-grabbing chief villain Cattivissimo. Also on hand are damsel-in-distress Clementina, her alcoholic dog and talking cows, red-headed saloon gal Esmeralda, Cattivissimo's fat and lean henchmen (Ursus and Slim, respectively) and assorted marauding Indians. Set to a fine Western-styled score by Giampiero Boneschi, one of the film's highlights comes towards the midpoint (in a sequence drawn in silhouette) where the complex-ridden Johnny receives the mother of all beatings in his first visit to the saloon.
cflav
I don't need to spend many words in praise of this work. Just watch it and enjoy the countless wits and funny situations which make this movie unique and delightful to see even 30 years after its release. Bozzetto shows you how to create a master-work out of good ideas and little money. Clearly this is a cartoon aimed to adults for its humor based on mocking "western" stereotypes, something that requires at least some knowledge of the matter. Definitely a cult movie.
bazzy
Thinking at the spaghetti-western movies of the sixties and seventies, this is the best parody of them all. Here we see how Bruno Bozzetto gets rid of all the most common characters of a western movie : good guys, bad guys, country ranch girls, federal army, native indian tribes, saloon pianists, cows, horses, and so on. Even the technique used for the cartoons (very "crappy", compared to the superb one we see in Walt Disney movies) seems to be done for making the parody even stronger. The most "normal" detail of the movie is the soundtrack, which seems to be composed by a fan of Ennio Morricone. The whole work is very good, funny from the main titles to the end quotes.