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A Bullet for the General

A Bullet for the General

Regular Price $19.98

Starring: Gian Maria Volontč,  Klaus Kinski,  Martine Beswick,  Lou Castel,  Jaime Fernández (II), 
Directed By: Damiano Damiani, 
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Release Date: 1968-09
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
Format: Color,  DVD-Video,  Widescreen,  NTSC, 


Editorial Reviews and DVD Information about A Bullet for the General


Customer Reviews for A Bullet for the General

J BRADSHAW
SAY WHAT YOU WANT TO ABOUT THIS MOVIE,BUT MAKE NO MISTAKE ABOUT IT,
THIS IS A GREAT AND BEAUTIFUL SPAGHETTI WESTERN."VIVA LA REVOLUTIONE'ES,"
AND "VIVA MEXICO"BEAUTIFUL MUSIC SCORE ALSO BY LUIS ENRIQUE BRACALOV
(UNDER THE SUPER VISION OF ENNIO MORRICONE)GIAN MARIA VOLONTE IS GREAT
IN HIS CHARACTER.IT IS ALMOST LIKE WATCHING INDIO ALL OVER AGAIN IN
FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE,WITH LESS COLDNESS AND HARSHNESS AS INDIO WAS.
GIAN MARIA'AKA:EL CHUNCHO,HAS A CAUSE,AND HIS CAUSE IS TO KILL ALL THE
FEDEARALES THAT HE AND HIS GANG CAN KILL AND COLLECT THERE GUNS AND
AMMUNITION THAT THEY CAN GET THERE HANDS ON,PLUS A MACHINE GUN THEY
PICK UP ALONG THE WAY AND SELL THEM TO HIS FRIEND AND COMMANDANTE
"THE GENERAL"IN HIS EFFORTS,HE PICKS UP LOU CASTEL AKA:NINO WHO GIVES
HIS NICKNAME TO HIM WHEN HE TAKES HIM ON A FREEDOM FIGHTER,BUT ALSO
HAS HIS AGENDA AS WELL.AND THAT IS TO KILL THE GENERAL.ALSO IN THE
MOVIE IS THE GREAT AND WONDERFUL KLAUS KINSKI WHO PLAY'S EL CHUNCHO'S
BROTHER.NINO ALONG THE WAY,CREATES DISCORD WITH EL CHUNCHO AND TRIES
TO CONFUSE HIS CAUSE,AND SPLIT'S THE GROUP UP.ONLY IN THE END OF THIS
MOVIE,DOES EVERYTHING COMES TOGETHER AS IN ALL THESE GREAT ITALIAN
WESTERNS.LOU CASTEL KILLS THE GENERAL AND GETS PAID $1OO,OOO DOLLARS IN
GOLD BY THE CORRUPTED MEXICAN GOVERNMENT,HIRED OUT AS A MERCENARY FOR
FORTUNE,THAT EL CHUNCHO FIND'S OUT,AND TO ELUDE HIS OWN DEATH HE SPLIT'S
THE MONEY WITH EL CHUNCHO($5O,OOO-EACH)AND TRIES TO CONVINCE HIM TO
GO TO AMERICA WITH HIM AND LIVE LIKE A KING.EL CHUNCHO IS ALMOST
SWEPT UP BY THIS AND SEEMS TO AGREE WITH NINO,BUT IN THE END HE SHOW'S
NINO(THE HARD WAY)HIS CAUSE IS GREATER THAN HIS,AND WHAT HE IS FIGHTING
FOR IS NOT FOR GOLD OR WEALTH,BUT AGAINST THOSE WHO REPRESENTS WEALTH,
IMPERIALIST AND CAPITALIST.THE ONES WHO CAN READ AND WRITE(FUNNY!!!)
AND SHOT'S NINIO THREE TIMES BEFORE GETTING ON THE TRAIN.AND ALSO
TAKES THE MONEY AND RUN ALSO(FUNNY ALSO!!)"VIVA MEXICO" "VIVA LA
REVOLUTIONE'ES"
A Bullet for the General

Oh my God! Klaus Kinski + brutal and crazy western!!!
This movie is just fun! Gian Maria Volonte made great performance here, he is almost as good as Kinski, maybe even better??? Yes, he is. Also Martin Beswick as "gun for hire" is gret. And the plot is so exciting! Just at the beginning we have scene of execution. And in the end... you will be suprised!!!:)A Bullet for the General

fast, violent, atmospheric - but flawed Western
The Bad:
The sound quality on the DVD is flat and lacking dynamics and the sound seems out of sync (or is it just bad dubbing?)
The film opens with an inappropriate "Untouchables style" narration that devastates a good opening sequence and annoyingly hangs over the beginning of the film.
Most dubbing actors emote with voices that are too loud. (Will dubbing actors ever learn to talk softly?)
Gian Maria Volente overacts and upstages just about everyone in a very uneven performance. Klaus Kinski is miscast in an non-essentail role as a Mexican bandito and dubbed with a ludicrous and cavalier voice that totally ruins his performance.
Shooting deaths seldom appear credible.
There are continuity errors galore: Train passengers intermittently look the wrong direction when talking to people outside the windows. A well-meaning lieutenant is inexplicitly shot in the belly even though he is lying flat on his stomach.
Characters make too many illogical decisions.
There is a feeling of hurriedness and sloppiness in the filmmaking.
Mexicans are portrayed as one of five familiar stereotypes: lackey solders, addlebrained peasants, and murdering banditos, corrupt officials or overly-idealized revolutionaries.
The film is very uneven as it jumps from political allegory to action film.
The writer and director ruin almost every scene that could contain credible moving drama by instead choosing to bludgeon us with one-sided and sophomoric political and social metaphors.

The Good:
Strangly many parts of the film are very rewatchable.
The film print is very very good if a bit soft.
Like many spaghetti westerns ABFTG boosts a great music score that perfectly fits the locations and action.
There are a multitude of similarities to the Wild Bunch just begging for comparisons.
The film is full of great western costumes props, backdrops and landscapes.
There is great atmosphere - especially arid deserts and extreme heat.
There are two good action scenes - banditos attacking a train and a gunfight in the desert with an old machine gun.
One truly great vignette - a Mexican commander is chained to the train track crucifixion style, as banditos pick off the train occupants one by one. Watching the helpless and doomed lieutenant and his soldiers (even though poorly dubbed and full of continuity errors) is one of the most memorable and atmospheric scenes of any western.
Two very good performances - Martine Beswick although given some bad dialogue is otherwise excelent as the female member of the Mexican banditos.
Lou Castel is perfectly cast as a resourceful, courageous but cold-blooded hitman. Castel's "Nino", looking like a very young twenties-style-ganster, riding with bandits, all the while orchesrating an assasination is the most compelling aspect of the film. It is very convincing that his calculated innocent voice and facial expressions could con anyone. Unfortunately the film-makers choice of forcing Castel to go out of character as an artless dandy in a sloppy political metaphor of an ending almost ruins Castel's otherwise perfect performance.
Its a shame that the film makers did not chose Beswick and Castel for the center of the film - they would have really had something.

Recommendation

All in all I recommend this film to spaghetti western fans. Fans of the American western may enjoy the film for it more closely resembles an American Western style along the lines of the Wild Bunch or The Treasure of Sierra Madre rather then a Leone film. But understand the film is uneven, sloppy, sometimes illogical, tragically dubbed and like most veiled propaganda films this one's silly, and one sided political metaphors get in the way of the entertainment.

Note:
Good Spaghetti westerns are known for their terrific music and sounds effects. But the great music and ambiance are almost ruined by the flat sound quality on the DVD. A sweetened soundtrack would have added immensely to ABFTG. Anchor Bay cleaned up one minute of music for the main menu - that minute is beautiful, and full of potential. If that had been done for the rest of the film I would have given this DVD version of ABFTG 4 stars.

A Bullet for the General

Spaghetti epic
Spaghetti westerns are, in my opinion, generally the best fictional films about the American West. You can argue that John Wayne made a bunch of great movies about life in the Old West, and you would be right to say so, but for some reason the Italians captured perfectly the specific elements of the era that made their movies seem more realistic. The frontier was a dirty, violent place full of unsavory types trying to get rich quick. Italian westerns capture this mood expertly whereas American films portray characters whose outfits look like they just came back from the dry cleaners. Hollywood films also tend to apply a black and white dichotomy onto their characters, the old "good guys wear white, bad guys wear black" philosophy that obscures the reality of the time and place. Not so in Italian films, where even the good guys often have distinctly unsavory traits. It's too bad spaghetti westerns went the way of the dinosaurs a few decades back; I never tire of watching these films even though I am not an expert on the genre. "A Bullet for the General," part of the larger Anchor Bay "Once Upon a Time in Italy" spaghetti western box set, serves as an excellent example of how powerful the genre once was.

If you enjoy spag westerns, you're going to love "A Bullet for the General." Like many other spaghettis, the film takes place in Mexico during the raucous revolutions of the early twentieth century. Bandits roam the countryside robbing and killing under the guise of revolutionary armies seeking social change. One band, led by a scruffy looking Mexican named El Chuncho (Gian Maria Volonte), earns their living by stealing weapons and selling them to a powerful warlord named General Elias (Jaime Fernandez). El Chuncho's band preys on federal army patrols, trains, and any thing else that allows them to realize their goals. Along with his holier than thou former priest turned revolutionary brother El Santo (Klaus Kinski) and a beautiful woman named Adelita (Martine Beswick), El Chuncho and his thugs make a good living at what they do. When the group happens to rob a train loaded with armaments, they run smack dab into a dapper gringo named Bill Tate (Lou Castel), a mysterious man who initially poses as a prisoner so he can get into the good graces of El Chuncho's army. Amused by the American and thankful for his help in stopping the train, the group decides to take him on as a fellow bandit and revolutionary. Chuncho even nicknames him "El Nino" in the process because of his baby-faced good looks.

Tate's hidden agenda remains hidden for most of the movie, but in the meantime he earnestly joins the guerilla war in Mexico. El Chuncho's band takes the rifles off the train and holes up in a poor village until it's safe to transport the arms to Elias's headquarters in the mountains. Regrettably, the local villagers convince the desperados to dispatch the brutal local landowner, a truly revolutionary action leading to land redistribution amongst the poor. Since the federal government opposes such actions, the village is certain to encounter an invasion force of substantial size. Suddenly, and probably due more to the pretty local women than any altruistic reasons, El Chuncho and El Santo take an interest in protecting the village from annihilation. The rest of the gang decides money is more important than a heroic stand, and heads off to Elias's fortress with the weapons. The now former bandit leader cannot stand to miss out on any of the action (or the money), and before too long is off riding after Tate, Adelita, and the rest of his compatriots. The conclusion to the movie, with Tate's true mission in Mexico revealed and the subsequent bloodbath that follows, is classic spaghetti western grit. Until the very end, you're just not sure what's ultimately going to happen.

"A Bullet for the General" is most notable for its strident political themes. All spaghetti westerns engage in the old good versus evil debate, but by the late 1960s the directors and writers of the films in this genre began inserting left wing rhetoric and pro-socialist situations into the pictures, thus turning the Old West into a mirror image of the turbulent social movements of the 1960s. Whereas in earlier movies you might see good guys and bad guys battling over money, in films like "A Bullet for the General" you see the good guys protecting the poor from money-grubbing big business interests such as railroads, oil companies, and landowners. El Chuncho's conversion from a greedy bandit to a socially conscious revolutionary symbolizes the transformation the New Left hoped most members of society would eventually undergo in the real world. Even the Church takes a shot on the chin in the movie, as El Santo becomes more authentic when he rejects the passivity of the pulpit in lieu of a socially active gospel requiring violent action against the propertied classes.

Unfortunately, a few problems plague "A Bullet for the General." First, the filmmakers failed to utilize the full potential of the volcanic Klaus Kinski. There is an intriguing scene where we see El Santo roaring biblical quotations from a rampart while tossing grenades into a mass of troops, but for most of the movie his character simply disappears. Second, the dubbing is awful--truly, ear achingly awful. But the good outweighs the bad. Anchor Bay performed miracles with the pristine picture transfer, the story is intriguing, and there's plenty of good shoot 'em up action. The DVD unfortunately only contains two trailers as extras, but the movie's good enough that you won't miss the behind the scenes stuff and interviews usually included on most discs. "A Bullet for the General" is must see viewing for spaghetti western aficionados, and a good introduction to the genre for the beginner.
A Bullet for the General

When the bullet turns red...
... the General will be dead.

I'm starting to get it, I think. The gig with spaghetti westerns, that is. Capitalism stinks, the Establishment is corrupt and everybody over thirty in clean clothes is likely to be shot. The good guys are greasy, sweaty, and rude. They talk when their mouths are stuffed with chicken stolen off the plate of the corrupt property holder. The good guys are a mescal induced nightmare of the progeny of hippies and Hell's Angels - a peculiarly sixties vision of a union of the odious with the sociopath.
The Hippie Creed is announced on the international trailer to A BULLET FOR THE GENERAL: "They gambled their lives for absolute freedom to do as they please." Right on, man.
None of this makes A BULLET an unpleasant viewing experience, but I didn't really much care who was going to be shot next, which was a good thing considering the body count in this one. Gian Maria Volonte plays El Chuncho, the leader of a band of marauders who loves The People. Klaus Kinski plays El Santo, El Chuncho's brother and a man who loves God. Lou Castel plays the gringo Bill Tate, dubbed "Nino" by El Chuncho, a man who loves Money. Castel is on a secret mission (he's carrying a golden bullet in his valise. Hint, hint) and to blend in with the banditos he's dresses up like a bank teller throughout the movie. How did he keep he shirt so clean and his collar so starched?
At one point El Chuncho tries to explain it to the uncomprehending Nino. While bear hugging a peasant he says "He's poor and filthy but he's a human being. Man the same as you. Do you understand?" Right on, man. Where was that little speech when you were murdering the land owner and ravishing his wife?
A BULLET FOR THE GENERAL is alright, but it might be a tough ride if you're like me and want someone to root for.A Bullet for the General

 
 
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