How European Westerns broke the American mold.
Movieweb
By Mona Bassil
April 4, 2023
The classic American Western movie genre depicts the adventures and struggles of the Old West/Frontier life in the 1800s, but from a romanticized point of view. Starting with The Great Train Robbery in 1903 and continuing to this day, traditional Westerns have followed a specific formula. Directors like John Ford or Howard Hawks, and actors like John Wayne or Gary Cooper created iconic films that enthralled audiences globally in the genre’s heyday, between the 1940s and the early 1960s. The Searchers, Shane, High Noon, True Grit, and Johnny Guitar are fine examples.
There was a clear line between protagonists and antagonists, and most stories concluded happily. Sure, there was gun, dynamite, and close-combat violence, but it wasn’t gratuitous and over-the-top. The dialogue was mostly engaging, with minimal profanity. The good guys were high on morality and had a clean look. On the other hand, the bad guys were instantly identifiable. Women were beautiful, slender, nurturing homemakers who needed to be rescued from kidnappers and robbers. Romances, albeit bittersweet, abounded. And children and pets were essentially used for emotional momentum; in Shane’s iconic closing scene, Little Joey screaming “Shane, come back!” to the drifter (Alan Ladd) who saved his little town and then rode away, broke the viewers’ hearts.
European filmmakers did not have Hollywood’s budgets but they, too, wanted to present trigger-happy characters, albeit in their own stylized way. So, they came up with a bolder formula that deviated from Hollywood's stereotypes. It’s unclear when the first Spaghetti Western was released, but most critics agree it was Sergio Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars, in 1964, that paved the way for at least 500 titles. The “Spaghetti” term was slapped because those movies were considered cheaper knockoffs of the American classics, and were filmed and produced by Italians for the most part.
Here are the essential ingredients to this messy and tantalizing sauce.
Filming
Notable Directors and Actors
Scoring
Antiheroes and Psychotic Villains
Violence, Profanity, and Nudity
Disillusionment and Cynicism
Spaghetti Westerns were occasionally released in American theaters, but were mediocrely dubbed. Sometimes, even titles and taglines were lost in translation. The iconic Il Buono, Il Brutto, Il Cattivo (The Good, the Ugly, The Bad) was translated into The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, thus making Lee Van Cleef’s character “the ugly” instead of “the bad.” This might seem like a trivial matter, but in a movie that is considered the quintessential Spaghetti Western, the good is only “good” compared to the other two, and “the ugly” is only moderately bad compared to the main antagonist; because unlike their American counterparts, these movies were actually meant to be morally gray.
While modern filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino are still
attempting to recapture its spirit, this trend technically fell out of fashion
in the late 1970s, and titles like the 1973 My Name is Nobody (with Terence
Hill and Henry Fonda), the 1976 Keoma (with Franco Nero), and the 1976 God’s
Gun (with Lee Van Cleef), are considered the ultimate farewell to this cult
subgenre.
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