Return of the
Seven (AKA Return of the Magnificent Seven)
Dir: Burt Kennedy
1966
**
The follow up to the classic western The Magnificent Seven is anything
but magnificent. There is barely even seven of them.
Yul Brynner is the only person to return to the franchise with every other
actor, producer and director moving on to better things. It was directed by
Burt Kennedy, who was no John Sturges but was a pretty good western director
with some pretty impressive (and underrated) titles under his belt and it was
written by the great Larry Cohen, a writer/director I've always had a soft spot
for who in all fairness is better suited to cheap horror rather than cowboy movies. Brynner doesn't quite have the same dynamic he had in the first film, he
looks a little lethargic, like he had no enthusiasm for the
project but the money was good. No one is really sure why Steve McQueen didn't
return but why his character was replaced, rather than rewritten as someone
else is more troubling. I like Robert Fuller but he neither looks nor sounds
like McQueen and was an odd choice to play the role of Vin Tanner. He could
have easily been written as someone else and the film would have been better
for it. The same can be said for the character of Chico. While I didn't love
Horst Buchholz character from the original film, replacing a German man with a
Spaniard (Julian Mateos) is one of the worst continuity errors I've seen (the
fact he was shot at least five times and still survived is just as puzzling).
Chico stayed in the village after the end of the last film but how he literally
became Mexican is beyond me? The rest of the seven suffer from a distinct lack
of character development. I really liked Virgilio Teixeira's Luis (a charming
bandit) and Warren Oates' Colbee, a gunslinger, comedian and ladies’ man.
Claude Akin's silent gunslinger Frank and Jordan Christopher's bull/cock
fighting Manuel failed to live up to their exciting introductions. Emilio
Fernandez was a huge Mexican actor but his villainous Lorca never really
had the threat or terror needed for the audience to really feel like the
farmers were ever in real danger. The farmers themselves could have been played
by cattle, it's certainly how they are treated. The story is similar
to the first but with absolutely no panache.
It's quite dull and uninteresting and woefully predictable, so much so that
even Elmer Bernstein's booming score (which was nominated at
the Academy Awards) couldn't muster the
desired excitement of the first. It's no wonder they dropped the
'Magnificent' in the original title.
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