GeronBook/Ch13/data/aclImdb/train/unsup/15732_0.txt

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One can see the influence of Sergio Leone writ large all over this large-scale Spaghetti Western (and not just in the casting of Eli Wallach from THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY [1966]) but Colizzi doesnt in any way show a comparable talent! The director also receives sole writing credit, which rather explains the films relentless self-indulgence padding a wafer-thin plot with lame attempts at characterization and dreary passages of local color! <br /><br />The film happens to be the second teaming of popular Italian brawling duo Terence Hill and Bud Spencer (the first GOD FORGIVES…I DONT [1967] was actually a prequel to this!) but Hills atypical glum countenance robs the film of some much-needed charisma. Incidentally, neither title American (which places an emphasis on the gambling subplot which comes into play only during the last third) or original, which roughly translates to FOUR GUNMEN OF AVE MARIA is really satisfactory…but, then, neither is the film itself: one isnt bothered by the sluggish pacing and extreme length of Leones Spaghetti Westerns, but that certainly cant be said here! Mind you, being a vintage outing, its moderately watchable and, at least, the print (via the Paramount DVD how they suddenly felt the urge to release this Ill never know!) was very nice…in contrast to its follow-up, BOOT HILL (1969), which I recently viewed by way of a horridly panned-and-scanned Public Domain edition.<br /><br />Anyway, the plot involves “lice-infected jailbird” Wallach being sprung from jail by a corrupt banker to retrieve a sum of money stolen from him by Hill and Spencer; there follows an endless series of chases and double-crosses with occasional interjections from black tightrope-walker Brock Peters and, it goes without saying, numerous stops for the duos trademark brawling antics. Eventually, the four join forces to clean up the gambling-house owned by Wallachs long-time enemy (and former partner) Kevin McCarthy: this is an elaborate and mildly suspenseful sequence climaxed by a shoot-out between the gang and McCarthy and his (anonymous-looking) henchmen on either side of the gambling table during a particularly busy night. The soundtrack is, once again, the handiwork of Carlo Rustichelli but, while serving its purpose, isnt especially remarkable within the impressive pantheon of Spaghetti Western scores…