000 naa a22 7ar4500
040 _aNEU
050 _aVCD 000121
245 _aThe Magnificent Seven
_cJohn Sturges
260 _aUSA
_c1960
306 _a128 min
500 _aThey were seven - And they fought like seven hundred!
520 _aARRAY(0x2b119dc)
520 _aA remake of ''The Seven Samurai'', this American version star Yul Brenner, Charles Bronson, Steve McQueen, and Robert Vaughn, just to name a few. They are picked to guard a Mexican village from Banditos that come every now and then to take whatever the town has grown since their last visit. When they are hired, they go to the town and teach the villagers how to defend themselves. When the leader of the bandits come ,they fight him and his men off. the second time he comes the villagers give the seven to them, due to a heated argument. The leader of the bandits take their guns and throw them out of town he gives them horses and gives their guns back to them when they are far out of town. The seven decide that they aren't going to run, and head back to the village for a final showdown.
520 _a"We lost. We always lose." Thus Yul Brynner summarizes the fate of men who kill for hire, knowing their lot is to look at life from the outside in until they too are killed. Credit this not exactly anti-Western with a healthy dose of reflexive realism, if not quite the ironic detachment of later classics like McCabe and Mrs. Miller. Seen today, it seems a direct ancestor of Unforgiven. Director Howard Sturges isn't out to lynch the form, just show the empty sacrifice and unfulfilled yearnings of the characters glorified or demonized by most Westerns. Following in the footsteps of the Seven Samurai, these seven display all the virtues of the hero's code, honoring women, showing kindness to children and compassion to the peasants who hire them, modelling at all times the enigmatic self-sufficiency that lies at the heart of Western romance. And they kill plenty of bad guys. Yul Brynner is riveting, combining blunt talk and characteristic balletic grace with the elongated strides of the American cowboy. Steve McQueen makes the most of his understated role, seeming laconic when he speaks and talkative when he's silent. See James Coburn, wippy-legged and steely-eyed, and a convincing Charles Bronson, as the lost soul who comes close to joining the human fold. Robert Vaughn, Brad Dexter and Horst Buchholz round out the pantheon, and 128 minutes just isn't enough time to flesh out each archetype, let alone give the villagers or villains their due. Cardboard cutouts maybe, but searing and not altogether predictable. You'll relish seeing stars when they were young and combustible. A word about bandito patron Eli Wallach: he is the definition of beady-eyed. When I saw this movie as a kid his calculating mendacity scared the living daylights out of me. Still does. There isn't a scene or word wasted as Sturges lives up to his part of the code: ratchet up the tension and keep things moving. If you are a newcomer to this film, its nicely nuanced themes will seem surprisingly mature for 1960. If you have seen it before, I'll bet you've watched it at least a dozen times. After all, it's got Elmer Bernstein's Marlborough Man score.
650 _aWestern
_9376438
650 _aAdventure
_9194715
650 _aDrama
_9119658
700 1 _9207641
_aBrynner, Yul,
_d1920-1985
700 _aEli Wallach
_9204623
700 _aSteve McQueen
_9204149
700 1 _9302905
_aBronson, Charles,
_d1951-
700 1 _9204147
_aVaughn, Robert,
_d1932-
700 1 _9207639
_aDexter, Brad,
_d1917-2002.
700 _9201876
_aCoburn, James.
700 _9207776
_aHoyos, Jorge Martínez de,
_d1920-1997.
_
700 _aVladimir Sokoloff
_9207777
700 _aRosenda Monteros
_9207778
700 1 _9207779
_aRico, Alaniz.
700 _aPepe Hern
_9207780
700 1 _9207781
_aVacio, Natividad,
_d1912–1996
700 _9207782
_aNavarro, Mario.
_
700 _9207783
_aBravo, Danny,
_d1948-
_
856 _uhttp://imdb.com/title/tt0054047
956 _uhttp://library.neu.edu.tr/uploaded-files/coverimages/tt0054047.jpg
942 _x1000020
_kVCD000121
_cVCD
005 20070306104526.0
008 070306s xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 ||| d
001 73867
999 _c61779