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FBG Movie Club: We're Getting the Band Back Together: Metallica vs Nina Simone Movie Docs (1 Viewer)

I currently have

  • Netflix

    Votes: 9 90.0%
  • Amazon Prime

    Votes: 9 90.0%
  • HBO Max

    Votes: 8 80.0%
  • Hulu

    Votes: 8 80.0%
  • Disney+

    Votes: 6 60.0%
  • Criterion

    Votes: 1 10.0%
  • TCM Chanel

    Votes: 6 60.0%

  • Total voters
    10
Yeah Leone movies tend to be long. Once Upon a Time in America is 226 minutes. Consider this make up time for months missed lol
251 minutes if you get the Director's Extended cut blu ray which I found on Amazon a while ago for the insanely cheap price of $6.99.

 
Cool and I see now The Good, The Bad and the Ugly is on NF. Lots of extra credit options!
This movie has the distinction of being my most bought movie. I do believe I have bought this movie every time a new technology came out. At one time I said I was done buying movies because I would get a nice collection and the technology would change. This movie was the straw that broke the camels back when it came to buying movies.

I have just recently started buying an occasional bluray but dvd era is when I decided buying movies was a bad idea. Especially with the streaming options of today.

I do love that movie though. I saw most of these westerns at the drive in and this was my favorite. 

 
As a little bit of a callback to the Juneteenth films, TCM is airing “Nothing But a Man” this afternoon.  Highly recommend.  It had poor distribution on its release in 1964, and, as a result, not well-known, but it is a pretty powerful movie on black life in America in the 1960s.  Ivan Dixon incredible in it.

 
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As a little bit of a callback to the Juneteenth films, TCM is airing “Nothing But a Man” this afternoon.  Highly recommend.  It had poor distribution on its release in 1964, and, as a result, not well-known, but it is a pretty powerful movie on black life in America in the 1960s.  Ivan Dixon incredible in it.
Abbey Lincoln is dreeeemeeee

 
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As a little bit of a callback to the Juneteenth films, TCM is airing “Nothing But a Man” this afternoon.  Highly recommend.  It had poor distribution on its release in 1964, and, as a result, not well-known, but it is a pretty powerful movie on black life in America in the 1960s.  Ivan Dixon incredible in it.
I saw it when they played it a couple months ago. Great film. 

 
Death rides a horse was very good. I will wait to vote as I need to watch the other film first. This film brought me back to the days of three channels on the tv. This was a lot of what we watched.

 
Death rides a horse was very good. I will wait to vote as I need to watch the other film first. This film brought me back to the days of three channels on the tv. This was a lot of what we watched.
How did you watch it? I pulled it up on Prime but the quality was really bad. The Youtube version seems a little better. Maybe I was just getting some poor quality connection with Prime at the time. 

 
The quality on the YouTube version is far far superior. I would highly recommend people watch that way. 

As for the movie itself, loved it. So much fun and when the Morricone score kicks in, it really hooks you. 

 
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How did you watch it? I pulled it up on Prime but the quality was really bad. The Youtube version seems a little better. Maybe I was just getting some poor quality connection with Prime at the time. 
Quality was really bad. I was thinking somebody needs to do something to save this film but I just thought that was how it was.

 
Quality was really bad. I was thinking somebody needs to do something to save this film but I just thought that was how it was.
I've noticed Amazon Prime has zero quality control and will put out the worst possible copies of movies at times. Using the YouTube app on my smart tv it looked fine. That is definitely the way to watch this.

 
Ilov80s said:
I've noticed Amazon Prime has zero quality control and will put out the worst possible copies of movies at times. Using the YouTube app on my smart tv it looked fine. That is definitely the way to watch this.
I was not aware of this. I will go the you tube route in the future.

 
I wrote up A Fistful of Dynamite two years ago in the Western thread
 

I watched a couple of Zapata Westerns in the past couple of months.  They're an odd sub-genre of Spaghetti Westerns with a definite Marxist bent.  They're always set in revolution-era Mexico and typically are a buddy story between a mysterious loner, usually a gringo paired with a Mexican bandit/revolutionary character.  The plots usually pit the two protagonists as rivals at the beginning who eventually join forces and gain respect for one another.  The villains are some combination of wealthy landowners, police/military and Catholic church figures.

Companeros stars Franco Nero as a the gringo nicknamed either "The Swede" or "Penguin" and Tomas Milian as a bandit who is consciously styled after Che Guevara.  It was directed by Sergio Corbucci, the other Sergio of Spaghetti Western fame.  It's a fun piece of entertainment featuring Jack Palance as a sadistic villain complete with mechanical hand, a pet falcon and an accent that's not of this planet.

Duck You Sucker is better known and is a bigger production.  It's the last Western directed by Sergio Leone and has a more epic scope than Companeros.  James Coburn plays the gringo (an Irish revolutionary) with Rod Steiger as a Villaesque bandit.  You know what you're in for when watching a Leone movie.  Duck You Sucker is a slight step down from TMWNN trilogy and Once Upon a Time but it's still worth watching.

Both films are available on Amazon Prime although Duck You Sucker is listed under its alternate title A Fistful of Dynamite.  Amazon also has one of the first Zapata Westerns A Bullet for the General, which I have in queue.  Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find a stream of the other early Zapata Western Classic The Big Gundown.  I saw it a long time ago and thought it was terrific.
Companeros isn't on Amazon any longer but there are streams available.  It's a hoot.

I found a YouTube link for A Bullet for the General but am still striking out on The Big Gundown. 

 
Watched fistful yesterday and liked it quite a bit more than I had in past viewing. In the past I could not get over how annoying the main theme music was. It was not the music itself, it was the singing of John John John that was annoying the #### out of me. I was reading about it last night and I saw the theme described as epic and truly wondrous as anything Morricone ever did. I would disagree but I will say it was much less noticeable on this viewing and I feel like that is why I enjoyed it more. Steiger is phenomenal in this.

I will save some thoughts for Monday but I will say two good flicks this month.

 
not sure i'll be able to get to the other in time, so let me knock out the first one while i have a free morning.

Fistful of Dynamite - It took me four hours to watch this masterpiece. Don't care for Westerns and movie violence frankly gives me a headache more often than not, for the ridiculous hero logic as much as the noise. And, even within that, i've never cared for Sergio Leone's pacing. He usually langours over his development of moments, far past the time i've already made my own hindsights & conclusions, rewritten what i would do and, frankly, have moved on to shopping lists or acid flashbacks. That's when i usually turn this master's movies off.

But i had a reason for watching this one - to bore, confuse & horrify fellow members of FBG-MC with my review. From the beginning, i was repeatedly getting internet-movie-watching head - checking scores, emails, freecell on a 2nd screen - once i'd guessed the likely outcome of a scene but, once i refocused on the scene, i'd sense i'd missed something. So i'd click back to the beginning of the scene and noticed how Leone had folded expectation into sentiment into narrative into impact like a great chef combining the ingredients of a souffle. Hmmmm.......beautiful. Took a half-dozen occasions of this - getting impatient, losing focus, wandering away, missing something, retracing - before i finally got into what Leone was trying to do and stuck with it. And i realized i didn't like his pacing for the same reason i dont like tweezer food at fancy restaurants. Savor Deficiency Disorder. Here a master is playing real time against movie time to deepen each moment, creating a context to make cartoonish violence be felt on a human level. And, thanks to sous chefs Steiger and Coburn, allowing the customer to know the flavor of feeling grief & moment while doing violence.

There's a French delicacy, Ortolan, where you eat a rare, small bird whole, in one bite. Supposedly, the crunching of each tiny bone is a huge part of the sublime exquisiteness of the experience. I'm far too utilitarian and pedestrian for that. Can't savor. At least until the other day, anyways. I was even able to put aside the worst catchphrase ever, "Duck, you sucker", and some truly creepyass MMF Sean Seanerson song action to feel the bones crush in the explosive gambits, Mexican genocides and father's losses of a true Western masterpiece. Glad i didn't duck.

 
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I’m starting Fistful of Dynamite now and am really excited that the Amazon version is of good quality and I’ll get to watch this on surround sound and not have to go to YouTube. 

 
I actually don’t mind Steiger as a Mexican for some reason. He pulls it off as well as any white guy I’ve seen short of Eli Wallach. Also Coburn looks kind of studly in this movie. What Instagram filter did Leone use so that anyone with blue or green eyes looked like they had bright shimmering diamonds for eyes? 

 
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I actually don’t mind Steiger as a Mexican for some reason. He pulls it off as well as any white guy I’ve seen short of Eli Wallach. Also Coburn looks kind of studly in this movie. What Instagram filter did Leone use so that anyone with blue or green eyes looked like they had bright shimmering diamonds for eyes? 
I noticed lots of teeth in this movie.

 
I noticed lots of teeth in this movie.
The opening few minutes Leone does some very extreme close ups but those are unflattering. When he does closeups on Coburn or Eastwood in other movies, he seems to get everyone’s eyes to look like they are Paul Newman. 

 
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I loved the movies this month. Death Rides a Horse was great but HFS A Fistful of Dynamite is an epic. Even better than The Good, the Bad and the Ugly IMO. 

 
I started off hot with an extra credit, but I’ve been taking my judging duties in the FBG Movie Draft too seriously, and have been using my movie time to watch/re-watchsome movies for that.  I’ll see if I can get in.  Starting A Fistful of Dynamite now. 

 
I've been working on my post-Beatles Beatles rankings all the time, and my only break was to watch a sci-fi movie KP turned me onto (not posting in case it's a movie draft spoiler), but I hereby affirm that I will watch Fistful of Dynamite based on the raves here and especially wikkid's post about it.

 
I've always like Spaghetti Westerns for their skewed take on American mythology.  On the whole, they're not much more unrealistic than classic Westerns although they take a lot of liberties especially with plotting.

I enjoyed Death Rides a Horse over the weekend.  I haven't watched A Fistful of Dynamite for two years but I'm pretty sure both used a similar narrative gimmick of two mismatched protagonists hopscotching their way through the story.  Van Cleef's Ryan was like a film noir hero seeking payback from his old gang while Bill was on a more traditional vengeance track like Charles Bronson in OUATITW.  It was a lower budget production than A Fistful of Dynamite which showed mostly in the larger sequences.  They could have done without the villagers but the filmmakers must have been working to a body count.  I've seen John Phillip Law in other films and he wasn't terrible but the dubbing editor did him no favors in this one.

A Fistful of Dynamite was a better film but it may be a case of nostalgia making me forget the awkward parts.  I think it was kind of slow in the middle but it's been a while.  I'm sure Steiger was the best character in either film and he carried A Fistful of Dynamite.  The explosions were definitely better as well.

 
If you like Spaghetti Westerns, I'll put in a plug for Poliziotteschi, the crime movies that succeeded Westerns as a top genre in Italian film.  You get the same over the top melodrama, complicated storylines and sneaky political references as in Spaghetti Westerns.  But Poliziotteschi offer more violence, car chases and glimpses of 70s Italian cityscapes.

There's a excellent documentary on Amazon Eurocrime! The Italian Cop and Gangster Films That Ruled the 70s that's a good survey.  English dubbed and subtitled prints aren't as readily available as for Westerns though

 
I've always like Spaghetti Westerns for their skewed take on American mythology.  On the whole, they're not much more unrealistic than classic Westerns although they take a lot of liberties especially with plotting.

I enjoyed Death Rides a Horse over the weekend.  I haven't watched A Fistful of Dynamite for two years but I'm pretty sure both used a similar narrative gimmick of two mismatched protagonists hopscotching their way through the story.  Van Cleef's Ryan was like a film noir hero seeking payback from his old gang while Bill was on a more traditional vengeance track like Charles Bronson in OUATITW.  It was a lower budget production than A Fistful of Dynamite which showed mostly in the larger sequences.  They could have done without the villagers but the filmmakers must have been working to a body count.  I've seen John Phillip Law in other films and he wasn't terrible but the dubbing editor did him no favors in this one.

A Fistful of Dynamite was a better film but it may be a case of nostalgia making me forget the awkward parts.  I think it was kind of slow in the middle but it's been a while.  I'm sure Steiger was the best character in either film and he carried A Fistful of Dynamite.  The explosions were definitely better as well.
As a whole, I was impressed. I hadn't looked at spaghetti westerns beyond the most famous Leone movies and Django. I liked all of them so I don't know why I never dug further. I thought both of these were super entertaining and I am glad @The Man With No Name picked them. 

 
As a whole, I was impressed. I hadn't looked at spaghetti westerns beyond the most famous Leone movies and Django. I liked all of them so I don't know why I never dug further. I thought both of these were super entertaining and I am glad @The Man With No Name picked them. 
They're very entertaining in their own strange way.  Even the ones that take themselves seriously have moments of slapstick and unintentional comedy.

It's also fun to play "spot that guy" while watching.  There are a bunch of character actors with interesting Western faces who pop up frequently in Italian film.  He's not Italian but it was cool to see Anthony Dawson playing the bad guy with the four aces tattoo.  Dawson acted in the first two 007 films including voicing Blofeld in that character's first movie appearance.

 
They're very entertaining in their own strange way.  Even the ones that take themselves seriously have moments of slapstick and unintentional comedy.

It's also fun to play "spot that guy" while watching.  There are a bunch of character actors with interesting Western faces who pop up frequently in Italian film.  He's not Italian but it was cool to see Anthony Dawson playing the bad guy with the four aces tattoo.  Dawson acted in the first two 007 films including voicing Blofeld in that character's first movie appearance.
I think you have to be very comfortable with taking in comedy, violence and brutality at the same time and with equal consideration. It's so serious that it's not. It's lack of any serious qualities, helps make it more serious. 

 
I think you have to be very comfortable with taking in comedy, violence and brutality at the same time and with equal consideration. It's so serious that it's not. It's lack of any serious qualities, helps make it more serious. 
I can't imagine how these films were received when they came a half century ago.  Modern audiences are accustomed to the combination of violence and lowbrow humor from watching horror films, Tarantino, exploitation films, etc. 

Spaghetti Westerns were so different even from the revisionist Westerns of the 50s and 60s.  They were from another planet compared to Gunsmoke and Bonanza.

 
I've forgotten what we did last year for horror, and how it went.   Was it Let the Right One In and something else?    

Didn't know if we even wanted to go that route again.  

 
KarmaPolice said:
I've forgotten what we did last year for horror, and how it went.   Was it Let the Right One In and something else?    

Didn't know if we even wanted to go that route again.  
We definitely do

 

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