|
Director: John Sturges |
| Screenplay:
William Roberts (based on The Seven Samurai by Shinobu
Hashimoto, Hideo Oguni, & Akira Kurosawa) |
| Stars: Yul Brynner (Chris), Eli Wallach (Calvera), Steve McQueen (Vin), Horst Buchholz
(Chico), Charles Bronson (O'Reilly), Robert Vaughn (Lee), Brad Dexter (Harry Luck),
James Coburn (Britt), Vladimir Sokoloff (Old Man) |
| MPAA Rating: NR |
| Year of Release: 1960 |
| Country: USA |
 |
|
It is oddly appropriate that John Sturges' The Magnificent Seven is an
Americanized remake of Akira Kurosawa's masterful Japanese epic Seven
Samurai (1954). Seven Samurai had not only been largely inspired by
American Westerns, but its popularity in the U.S. helped to revitalize the Western genre in
the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s. While Sturges' film does not compete with
Kurosawa's in terms of either visual dexterity or thematic complexity, it is still a rousing
adventure story that not only includes a brilliant cast, but explores some of the deeper
contradictions of the mythic noble outlaw that was so endemic to the American Western
genre.
The majority of The Magnificent Seven is set in Mexico, where a peaceful village
of farmers is under constant threat from a vicious bandit named Calvera (Eli Wallach), who
rides in from time to time with his gang of forty strong and steals the village's food and
supplies, leaving them barely enough to survive. Finally fed up with living under Calvera's
thumb, several of the villagers go north to Texas in order to find guns for hire who will
come down and help them fight.
The first man they convince to help them is Chris (Yul Brynner), a wandering Cajun
gunslinger with a conscience and a strong sense of nobility. He teams up with another
gunslinger named Vin (Steve McQueen), and together they slowly assemble a group of
desperate men who nonetheless cling to some vestiges of honor in a world that is quickly
modernizing and making their kind scarce (this theme would be taken to its logical extreme in
Sam Peckinpah's 1969 masterpiece The Wild Bunch).
The final group also includes Britt (James Coburn), O'Reilly (Charles Bronson), Lee
(Robert Vaughn), and Harry Luck (Brad Dexter). Lastly there is Chico (Horst Buchholz), a
young, would-be gunfighter whose role was played in the Seven Samurai by
the great Toshiro Mifune. Chico is naive and high-spirited, with more machismo than brains,
yet he also represents the future. Buchholz plays Chico with energy and a sense of comedy,
but he does not bring to the role the kind of comic sadness that made Mifune so poignant and
hilarious in Samurai.
The first half of the film details how Chris and Vin put the group together--the formation of
"The Magnificent Seven"--while the second half deals with their battles against Calvera.
There are two climactic battle scenes between Calvera's men and the villagers led by the
seven gunslingers. Director John Sturges, who had extensive experience directing both
action films and Westerns such as Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) and
Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), stages these battle with simple efficiency. They
are not as visually compelling as either Kurosawa's work or what Peckinpah would bring to
the genre 10 years later, but they are exciting and well-paced, with a strong sense of urgency
and a clear notion of what is at stake.
Throughout The Magnificent Seven, Sturges displays his keen sense of
efficiency; there is not a wasted frame or line of dialogue in the whole film. This ensures a
quick pace and maximum audience involvement, yet it sacrifices some of the more subtle
humanistic qualities that set Seven Samurai apart.
Sturges relies largely on his talented cast of then-unknowns (Brynner, who had won the
1957 Oscar for The King & I, was the only true marquee star) to carry the film's
thematic burden. You can see why these men were cast: All of them have unique, memorable
faces that convey both conviction and desolation. They play men who have come to the end
of their ropes, and all they have left to do to salvage their nobility is to protect a poor village
of farmers. Harry Luck's insistence, even with his dying breath, that there were hidden
riches in the hills around the village is testament to their desperation. Yet, all of them attain
greater heights of humanity by sacrificing themselves in a just cause.
In playing Calvera, Eli Wallach does an excellent job of conveying how closely associated he
is with the members of the Magnificent Seven. After all, they are all gunslingers and
outlaws; the only obvious difference between them is which side of the line they stand on in
this particular situation. This makes the film much more complex than it first appears, as it
becomes increasingly difficult to draw simple distinctions of good and evil. We naturally
want to side with the Magnificent Seven, yet we are constantly reminded that they are
criminals with no ties to land, family, or nation (something that was always true of Western
heroes, but never consciously explored).
Yet, at the same time, there is something about the conviction and determination of the seven
men to help protect the village that assures us there is at least some difference
between them and men like Calvera. One of the key moments comes when one of the
Mexican villagers assumes that all the outlaws care about is the money. Chris quickly puts
him right by saying, "Men in this line of work are not all alike. Some care about nothing but
money; others, for reasons of their own, enjoy only the danger." It is that moment more than
any other in the film that makes you realize the importance of individual humanity, even
among gunslighers. They may all be outlaws and killers, but they are not all the same.
| The Magnificent
Seven DVD |
|
| Aspect
Ratio | 2.35:1 |
| Anamorphic | Yes |
| Audio |
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
Dolby 1.0 Monaural |
| Languages | English
(5.1, 1.0), French (1.0), Spanish (1.0) |
| Subtitles | French,
Spanish |
| Supplements |
Audio commentary by producer Walter Mirisch, actors Eli Wallach and James Coburn, and
assistant director Robert Relyea
Guns for Hire: The Making of The Magnificent Seven: 45-minute
documentary
Two original theatrical trailers
Stills gallery
|
| Distributor | Metro
Golwyn-Mayer |
| SRP | $19.98 |
|
| VIDEO |
| MGM has done a very nice job with this new transfer.
Presented in anamorphic widescreen (2.35:1), The Magnificent Seven looks
excellent throughout, especially for a film that is now 41 years old. Colors look just a tad
faded in a few scenes, but the overall image is strong and vibrant, with good detail, relatively
solid black levels, and natural-looking flesh tones. Digital artifacting is nonexistent, and
there are only a few instances of dirt or specks.
|
|
| AUDIO |
| The soundtrack has been remixed into Dolby Digital 5.1
surround, and despite the inherent limitations of the original source elements, the result is
quite impressive. Elmer Bernstein's instantly recognizable Oscar-nominated score benefits
the most from the new mix; the five channels give the score the kind of scope and depth it
deserves. Dialogue and sound effects are mostly relegated to the front sound stage, although
the shoot-outs are expanded by moving some of the sound effects to the rear channels. The
gunshots are somewhat tinny and don't have the kind of thunder found in modern action
films, but that is a result of the original elements. |
|
| SUPPLEMENTS |
| There have been many complaints among DVD enthusiasts
that MGM puts out too many DVDs too quickly with not enough attention paid to
supplementary material. That complaint cannot be applied to this release of The
Magnificent Seven, which boasts a solid set of extras.
The audio commentary by producer Walter Mirisch, actors Eli Wallach and James Coburn,
and assistant director Robert Relyea is relaxed and easy-going, filled mostly with humorous
anecdotes and memories about the production. All four men were recorded together at the
same time, so their discussion has an easy, natural flow. They spend much of the time
talking about producer/director John Sturges and how much respect they all have for him.
Guns for Hire: The Making of The Magnificent Seven is an engrossing
45-minute documentary that covers the history of the sometimes troubled production, from
the battles over who was going to produce the film, to the restrictions imposed by Mexican
censors who wanted to guarantee Mexico was not shown in a bad light, to the rivalries
among some of the cast, most notably the well-established Yul Brynner and the upstart Steve
McQueen. The documentary features numerous interviews with most of the surviving
members of the cast and crew, including producer Walter Mirisch, associate producer Lou
Morheim, stars James Coburn, Eli Wallach, Robert Vaughn, and Horst Buchholz, as well as
archive footage of interviews with Yul Brynner. The documentary is presented in
anamorphic widescreen (1.85:1)
The disc also contains a stills gallery and two original theatrical trailers, both of which are
presented in anamorphic widescreen (2.35:1).
|
Overall Rating:    (3.5) |