Viking Night: A Fistful of Dollars

By Bruce Hall

May 8, 2012

Is the Man with No Name doing his nails?

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That time was before this movie. A Fistful of Dollars is often overshadowed by its younger, more polished sibling - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. It's true that the latter ended up being the defining picture of its genre, but the original is the one that created that genre. Is this the Star Wars of Westerns? Is Clint Eastwood Han Solo? No, because Clint Eastwood could easily kick Han Solo's ass, even at his current age of 141.

But back in 1964, he played a Lone Wanderer who stumbles upon a desert town run by two ruthless gangs, the Rojos Brothers and the Baxter Gang. On the way into town the Wanderer has a run in with the Baxters. After, a sympathetic saloon owner hooks him up with some grub, some booze, and the tragic tale of how both gangs are bleeding the town dry. After a moment's reflection The Wanderer realizes he’s looking at competing hordes of power hungry meatheads whose understanding of strategy is limited to drinking games and farting contests. It could be a goldmine.

"There’s money to be made in a place like this", he says, and he’s right. If the Rojos can do it, someone with an actual brain could be running the town in a week. He devises a cunning plan to get the better of the two gangs and walk away a rich man in the process. The problem is, the Rojos aren’t all as dumb as they look, and the Baxters aren’t about to go down without a fight. Add a detachment of soldiers passing through town with a mysterious cargo and a local family in need, our Wanderer has his work cut out for him.

I'll admit the plot sounds familiar. That's either because you're a Kurosawa fan, or because A Fistful of Dollars is one of the most influential (and kick-ass) films of the 20th century. I know I don't have to tell you why Clint Eastwood is awesome. If I do, you're clearly with The Terrorists. It's not that this film invented the brooding antihero, or even the Lone Wanderer. But it did invent a new kind of Western, and influence a new kind of action hero in American cinema. We like 'em complex and morally ambiguous these days, because it fulfills a basic human need to feel superior to someone, even as you worship them.




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The film's Japanese inspired cinematography suggested a whole new way to shoot an action picture. The innovative score was equal parts traditional and avant garde. And of course Eastwood's stoic sneer, battered hat and half chewed cigar are unquestionably recognizable. So much so that just by being himself, Eastwood probably got paid every time Chuck Bronson shot a guy, Mel Gibson said "I'm too old for this shit" or Bruce Willis said "yippie ki-yay..."

Okay, I don't wanna lose my PG-13. You get my point. Every time a handsome, virile stud like me says "Get three coffins ready" to you in an elevator, you'll know there's no need to call the police - because it's from a great movie. A Fistful of Dollars was a turning point in film history, and a lot of the things you liked about action heroes before Shia LaBeouf and Channing Tatum came along, you have this movie to thank for. And just think; it all started with a little detective novel by Dashiell Hammett.

Wait, what? Like I said, people have been borrowing each other’s ideas for as long as people have had ideas. It's how stories are told. It's how legends are made. It's how ballsy American action flicks became the envy of the world. Think about that for a minute; the obvious conclusion here is that were it not for Clint Eastwood and an Italian guy who didn't speak a lick of English, the United States of America would not be what it is today. You're welcome, Earth.


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