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Italy
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1968
Directed
by Camillo Bazzoni
Starring
Steve Reeves
Wayde Preston
Silvana Venturelli
Color
| 86 Minutes
| Not Rated
Format: DVD (R0 - NTSC)
Wild East Productions
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New,
improved Code Red Edition!
(January 2011)
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Review
by
Rod Barnett
Film:6
DVD:6
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| Steve
Reeves plays Mike Sturges, a rancher who, with his brother Roy
(Franco Fantasia) and his mother, is raising horses in the desert
southwest. Things are going well for the family Sturges until
a herd of their animals is stolen on the way to market and all
but one of the ranch hands with them are killed during the theft.
Mike, Roy and another hand set out to track the herd but are ambushed
by an old friend of Mike's named Maynard (Wayde Preston). Maynard
and his gang injure the Sturges boys and leave them for dead near
the scene of their next crime —
a daring train robbery to lay hands on a shipment of newly minted
gold coins. |
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The
brothers' protestations of their innocence go unheeded and soon
both are tossed into Yuma prison. The harsh conditions of the
infamous hard labor pen take their toll on Roy, with his physical
weakness drawing an outsized amount of attention from the sadistic
guards. Mike knows there is nothing he can do and develops a stoic
attitude refusing to even talk, regardless of the provocation.
But when the cruel attentions of the head guard finally kill Roy,
his brother snaps and within minutes stages a reckless escape
that gets many guards and several inmates killed. Mike makes it
to the nearest town and receives aid from a sympathetic prostitute
(the luscious Rosalba Neri), who also helps him off the sadistic
head guard when he comes calling for his regular Saturday night
thing. |
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Mike
makes it home to find his ranch lifeless and gone to ruin while
his mother has died of a broken heart months before. Having nothing
left to live for, Sturges decides to hunt down the men responsible
for the destruction of his life and exact harsh revenge... |
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As
you can tell there really isn't much in the bare bones of the
story of A Long Ride from Hell to
distinguish it from dozens of other spaghetti westerns. A
man done wrong suffers hideously until he can turn the tables
on his tormentors and take a full measure of revenge — pretty
standard stuff even by 1968. The elements that make this film
stand just a little out of the pack is a combination of a fine
movie star making a strong play to break out of his usual ‘muscle
man’ genre rut and some nice, stylish touches from director Camillo
Bazzoni. He didn't have a long career in the director’s chair,
with only eight other movies to his credit, but his lengthy list
of jobs as a cinematographer show where his talent lies. Although
this DVD doesn't present a perfect print of the movie it's clear
enough to see that Bazzoni's eye for well framed shots and interesting
blocking served the story well. The repeated use of angles that
put Reeves against the empty sky display his despair at his fate
or shrink him down to small size to emphasize lack of power demonstrate
a desire to have form follow function —
as
much as possible. The occasional sloppy scene does break the effect
from time to time but overall the director seems to have done
well with his camera. My favorite directorial touch is the way
in which Roy’s tortuous crucifixion on a large wheel is shown
hovering over the prisoners as they break rocks under the burning
sun. It’s a great image and I would like to know if it came from
the source material or was created by the filmmakers. |
As
noted in Charles Ambler's brief liner notes on the back of the
DVD case, this film was more than just Steve Reeves’ attempt
to create a new movie persona for himself (even if he’s seen
wrestling a bull to the ground in the opening minutes). He had
bought the rights to Gordon Shirreffs’ novel The Judas Gun
and worked as both producer and co-scriptwriter to get
the film made. Having worked for years in the Italian film industry
— starting in the late 1950s with the world-famous Hercules
films — Reeves had plenty of insight into how to pull together
a good cast and crew. Besides Bazzoni (working under the pseudonym
Alex Burks) he hired scripter Roberto Natale, who had written
Bloody
Pit of Horror and two Mario Bava films; composer Carlo
Savina, who was responsible for the scores of dozens of peplum
and western films before and after this one; and as director
of photography Enzo Barboni, who'd go on to direct the Trinity
comedy/westerns. In front of the camera A
Long Ride from Hell boasts just as many high quality
participants besides the already mentioned Lady
Frankenstein herself, Rosabla Neri. Mimmo Palmara, Nello
Pazzafini and Silvana (Camilla 2000)
Venturelli handle their roles very well and are only a few of
the familiar faces for Euro-Cult fans throughout the movie.
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| Wild
East's DVD of A
Long Ride from Hell
is a welcome addition to their Spaghetti Western Collection
(Volume 25 in fact). The company's dedication to releasing many
of the rarer entries in the genre is laudable and I try to encourage
the continuation of this line by buying as many as I can. In a
perfect world all Spaghettis would be available in nice widescreen
presentations but until the dawn of that utopia Wild East is doing
yeoman work. The film looks good, if far from pristine, with a
mostly colorful and crisp image presented in 1.66:1 aspect ratio
that is, sadly, not enhanced for widescreen televisions. This
is a shame as the picture quality falls off a good deal when blown
up for 16x9 viewing. The sound is strong and clear, with only
the English mono dub provided. |
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The
extras are a big surprise although with the biggest being a nearly
one-hour interview with actor Mimmo Palmara, who usually worked
under the name "Dick Palmer". An astonishing trek through
his huge filmography, this fine piece shows Palmara talking bluntly
and amusingly about his roles, his directors, his co-stars and
his memories of a career that spanned over 70 movies. This was
an unexpected pleasure and I highly recommend this for any fan
of Euro-Cult cinema. Also included is about 15 minutes of rough
video footage of members of the Italian Steve Reeves Fan Club
meeting with their idol at his ranch. It’s kind of interesting
to see the late star in happy retirement and glad to greet his
adoring public, but the piece isn't particularly special and imparts
no real information. Overall this is a good DVD for spaghetti
western fans and of special interest for the fascinating interview
of Mimmo Palmara. Well worth the asking price, I think. 8/14/09 |
| UPDATE
In January 2011 a superior edition of the film is being released
by Code Red, boasting a remastered anamorphic 1.78 transfer and
the same slate of extras as the Wild East disc. |
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