Grand Canyon Massacre
Grand Canyon Massacre | |
---|---|
Directed by |
Albert Band Sergio Corbucci |
Produced by |
Albert Band Alfredo Antonini (co-producer) |
Written by |
Albert Band Sergio Corbucci Fede Arnaud (dialogue) |
Starring |
James Mitchum Milla Sannoner George Ardisson |
Music by | Gianni Ferrio |
Cinematography | Enzo Barboni |
Release dates | May 25, 1964 (Italy) |
Running time | 89 min. |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Grand Canyon Massacre is a 1964 Italian spaghetti western motion picture starring James Mitchum, Milla Sannoner, and George Ardisson. It is also known as Massacre At Grand Canyon.
Directed by Albert Band and Sergio Corbucci, and produced by Albert Band and Alfredo Antonini, the original title in Italian is Massacro al Grande Canyon. The movie's theme song was performed by Rod Dana.
Plot
After finding and killing the Slade brothers, who have murdered his father, Wes Evans returns home to Arriba Mesa. The judge offers him to be sheriff and Cooley, the holder of the office and a friend of Wes, is anxious to step down. Wes however only wants to settle down, but when he learns that his love Nancy (who believed Wes to be dead) has married Tully Dancer, he decides to leave again.
However he is drawn into the ongoing ranch war between the Dancer family and Harley Whitmore. When learning that the Dancers have called in an outlaw gang lead by the notorious Flake Manson and his brothers, Whitmore acts quickly and rides with a large body of men against the Dancer ranch. They are ambushed by Tully Dancer’s men at a pass and the groups entrench against each other. Wes, who worries for Nancy, negotiates a truce: Whitmore will refrain from pushing through and the Dancers will send off the Manson gang. Tully and his father decide to secretly offer Flake Manson more money to get him to act, even if this endangers the life of Tully’s brother Clay, who is sent to Whitmore as a hostage for the truce.
Wes and Cooley arrest the other Manson brothers that are in town, one of them when he tries to rape Nancy. However, Tully finds Flake and they besiege the prison and leave men to hold Wes pinned while they attack Whitmore’s force. Wes and Cooley (with the help of Nancy) manage to trick the men into revealing themselves and kill them, but Cooley dies too. Wes convinces the townspeople to take sides and ride to the pass. Tully and Flake, who had Whitmore between two fires, now suffer the same fate. Wes kills Flake and Tully escapes with Wes in hot pursuit.
Tully tries to set fire to the disputed grassland, but he is killed by Fred, a farmer who earlier had lost a leg in the ranch war. Wes arrives with the corpse of Tully just in time to stop Whitmore from hanging Clay. Wes will stay on as sheriff, with Nancy by his side.
Cast
- James Mitchum as Wes Evans
- Milla Sannoner as Nancy
- George Ardisson as Tully Dancer
- Giacomo Rossi-Stuart as Sheriff Burt Cooley
- Burt Nelson as Clay Dancer
- Eduardo Ciannelli as Eric Dancer
- Andrea Giordana
- Ferdinando Poggi as Ace Mason
- Benito Stefanelli
- Renato Terra as Cureley Mason
- Vladimir Medar as Harley Whitmore
- Vlastimir Gavrik as Bear Mason
- Attilio Severini as Flake Mason
Reception
In his investigation of narrative structures in Spaghetti Western films, Fridlund argues that the story of Grand Canyon Massacre basically conforms to the "Classical plot", as described by Will Wright referring to US westerns like Shane[1] but adds that there are a couple of scenes reminding of the visual style that would later be developed in the westerns by Sergio Leone.[2] In a 2012 review on The Ace Black Blog,[3] the film is awarded the lowest rating of 1 star out of 5, with the comment "Massacre At Grand Canyon has neither the original earnest spirit of the genre nor the stylistic panache of the soon-to-be-rampant spaghetti westerns. It is just an unfortunately bad film, lost between cultures."
See also
References
- ↑ Wright, Will: Sixguns & Society. A Structural Study of the Western. University of California Press, 1975 pp. 32-59.
- ↑ Fridlund, Bert: The Spaghetti Western. A Thematic Analysis. Jefferson, NC and London: McFarland & Company Inc., 2006 pp. 74-75.
- ↑ The Ace Black Blog, Movie Review: Massacre At Grand Canyon (1964).