Guillermo de Oliveira recovers for the cinema the
cemetery of "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly"
Faro de Vego
By Agatha de Santos Vigo
10/13/2018
[From Left to Right, Sergio Garcia, Joseba del Valle,
Christopher Frayling and Guillermo de Oliveira]
“Sad Hill Unearthed” is the story of the cemetery that
Sergio Leone created in Burgos to shoot the last sequence of "The Good,
the Ugly and the Bad" (1966), but it’s also the story of a dream of a
group of followers of this "spaghetti western" for recovering the
scenario of the famous duel.
“Sad Hill Unearthed” is a sign that dreams can be
fulfilled. They know its four protagonists, David Alba, Diego Montero, Joseba
del Valle and Sergio Garcia, of the Cultural Association Sad Hill, which in
2014 decided to remove all the vegetation from the Sad Hill cemetery, located
in the Mirandilla Valley (Burgos), where Sergio Leone filmed the duel between
the three characters of "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" (1966). And
he knows the director of this documentary, the vigués Guillermo de Oliveira,
who also met with the odd obstacle along the way to make this film a reality.
De Oliveira documented the recovery of Sad Hill from the
first digging works, in 2015, until the party in a revived Sad Hill with which
these archaeologists of the cinema commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of
this "spaghetti western". "I learned about the project through a
friend and I knew right away that I had to tell that story, although at the
beginning it was going to be a short film", explained the director from
Almería yesterday, where in the afternoon the documentary was screened at the
Western Festival of Almería, after passing through Sitges, where he premiered
in Spain after his tour of the Tokyo, Santa Bárbara (United States) and Buenos
Aires contests.
But the story was growing, parallel to the work in Sad
Hill, and while the association collected voluntary labor in the network and
funds through a crowdfunding campaign - "Sponsor a grave" -, De
Oliveira initiated the contacts to speak with the shooting team, fans of the
film and ex-soldiers and officers of the San Marcial de Burgos barracks,
employees to build the cemetery and act as extras in the sequence of the
blasting of the bridge, also filmed in Burgos. Clint Eastwood, "the
Good"; Ennio Morricone, author of the soundtrack; Christopher Frayling,
writer and biographer of Sergio Leone (Rome, 1929-1989); Eugenio Alabiso,
editor of "El bueno, el ugio y el malo", and Sergio Salvati,
photography assistant, participate in the documentary, as well as directors Joe
Dante ("Gremlins") and Álex de la Iglesia, and the leader of
Metallica, James Hetfield, among other fans of the movie.
"Getting to Eastwood, Morricone and Hetfield took
months, we had to arm ourselves with patience because sometimes the hardest
thing is not to convince them, but that those around them send them the
proposal," says De Oliveira. Only Quetin Tarantino, a great admirer of
Leone's cinema, was left out of the documentary. "I think our message did
not reach him, but I know he received the tape from a journalist who was in
Sitges," he says.
The images of a Metallica concert in Gothenburg (Germany)
open and close the "Unearthing Sad Hill", thus completing a circle
similar to that drawn by the crosses of Sad Hill, conceived as a Roman circus.
The documentary will reach the cinemas next October 19,
although to see it in Vigo will have to wait a little longer, until the 26th,
in a session that will have the presence of the director himself. "It's
not just a movie about cinema, but about the achievement of dreams, and that's
why anyone who comes to see it will see itself reflected, even if it likes
another type of cinema," he says.
De Oliveira and the production company, Zapruder
Pictures, have a tomb in Sad Hill, like thousands of people who participated in
the sponsorship campaign that the association launched to be able to cope with
the material expenses to recover the 5,000 crosses of the Sad Hill original.
"People from more than thirty countries participated, which gives an idea
of the importance of this initiative and of the film itself.There is no
better filter than the passage of time and 'The good, the ugly and the bad'
will outlive us all ", says De Oliveira, who also highlights the communion
of the image with the soundtrack. "The film cannot be understood without
the music of Morricone," he says. Precisely getting the rights to use the
music and images of the "spaghetti western" was the most difficult.
"I came to think that I would have to show it without the permits even if
they denounced me because I knew that the story had to be known," he
insists.
SAD HILL UNEATHERED, 2017
ReplyDeleteI happened upon this documentary which is now streaming on NETFLIX.
I was totally impressed by the "fans" and their dedication to restoring the Sad Hill Cemetery from The Good The Bad and The ugly. They cleared away 7 inches of soil to expose the "stone circle", Piled dirt on each grave and restored the Crosses. In order to fund the project this group sold "NAMES" ON EACH CROSS". As a fan of Spaghetti Westerns you could send money and have YOUR name on one of the crosses. I am sure dedicated fans would love to have their names displayed for all to see.
There is even a short clip of Clint Eastwood, commenting on the project.
If you don't have NETFLIX, you can watch this review on You Tube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8SfgVM3-eg&t=199s
Track it down and you won't be disappointed.
Larry Anderson.