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Navajo Joe
(1966)
Director: Sergio Corbucci
Cast: Burt Reynolds, Fernando Rey, Aldo Sanbrell
Whenever someone takes a big fall in their
career, it can get a wide range of reactions
from observers. Sometimes observers will get a
big sense of satisfaction of seeing the party in
question take the fall. Take those in politics,
for example. I'm confident in saying that there
were a lot of happy people when tyrants like
Napoleon and Hitler fell from power. I should
admit that I get a lot of satisfaction whenever
I read in the news of a modern-day politician
take a fall, since I think that all politicians
are crooks (I'm a proud non-voter.) When it
comes to various individuals in the
entertainment field, however, seeing someone
fall usually gets from me the feeling of, "What
a shame" and, "What could have been with this
person if they didn't have all that bad luck."
There's filmmaker Preston Sturges, for example.
After making the disastrous decision to leave
Paramount Pictures for chances of more creative
control, he was finished as a filmmaker after
the three movies he directed afterwards flopped
at the box office, afterwards being reduced to
being nothing more than a screenplay doctor.
Then there's the case with director Sam
Peckinpah. Just a few years after directing
movies like The Getaway and
The Wild Bunch, a string of box-office
flops and problems in his personal life combined
reduced him to directing second-rate movies like
Convoy and The Osterman
Weekend, then ending his career just
before his death by being reduced even further,
to directing music videos.
Then there is the case of actor Burt
Reynolds, his situation possibly being even more
than a tragedy than other entertainment
individuals, because of all the time and effort
he had previously put into his career before he
finally became a superstar. He acting career,
which he started in his early 20s, was at first
a struggle, getting the occasional role in
plays. Things slowly progressed from this point,
eventually getting some bit parts in movies and
balancing this with television work; some of
this television work consisted of lead roles in
series (most short-lived, however.) The movie
roles he was cast in slowly became meatier,
enough so that he became a somewhat famous movie
actor that some of the public recognized. Then
in 1972 came Deliverance, the
second-highest grossing movie of the year that
can probably be called the movie that made him a
superstar. For the next ten or so years,
Reynolds' career was solid (Smokey And The
Bandit, The Cannonball Run,
etc.) despite the occasional box office flop.
Then in the 80s is when things started to go
wrong for him, and his fall started. By this
point, audiences were tiring of the yahoo
Southern good-ol'-boy movies he was making, and
they stopped seeing them. Reynolds tried making
different kinds of movies during this period (Paternity,
City Heat, Stick,
etc.), but they made little impact with
audiences or the critics. It didn't help his
popularity that there were vicious rumors going
around at the time that the then-ill Reynolds
had AIDS.
Reynolds has had the occasional success since
then (his TV series Evening Shade ran for
several seasons, and his role in Boogie
Nights got critical acclaim and an Oscar
nomination), but apart from these few successes,
he has not been able to recapture the kind of
superstardom he had in the 1970s. One other
reason he has not been able to do so has to do
with something that happened in his personal
life in 1996. In that year, he was forced to
declare bankruptcy (being 10 million dollars in
debt) after a number of costly things in his
life added up, including his messy and expensive
divorce to Loni Anderson. You do have to give
credit to Reynolds to what he declared after
declaring bankruptcy; he not only said he would
cut back on his expenses, he said he would pay
back every dime. And he seems to be true to his
word; in the 13 years since he declared
bankruptcy, he has appeared in over 40 movies,
which averages to a little more than 3 movies a
year. (He has also done some television
appearances in this period as well.) While his
determination to pay off his debts is admirable,
what is not so admirable about all the work he's
done in the past few years is the quality of the
movies he has signed on to. Most of these movies
have been direct-to-video, and their quality is
questionable; Reynolds in this period has not
only worked for Albert Pyun (Crazy Six),
he has also worked for Uwe Boll (In The
Name Of The King).
The quality of most of these movies Reynolds
has appeared in the past few years is not far
off from some of the bad movies he made before
he became a superstar. If you were to ask
Reynolds for an example of a bad movie he made
before he became a superstar, he would probably
say Navajo Joe. In interviews, he
has said this is one of the worst (if not the
worst) film he has made. Despite this, I wanted
to see the movie for a long time, because it was
a spaghetti western, and after many bad
decisions Reynolds has made you have to question
his judgment; it couldn't possibly be that
bad. It finally came out on DVD several months
ago, and I ordered a copy. Reynolds (who is part
Cherokee in real life) plays the title
figure, as you probably figured out from him
being top-billed. He doesn't appear in the
opening scene, because the movie is more
determined to have something big to start things
off: a violent massacre! Barely thirty seconds
into the movie the violence starts, when evil
bandit Duncan (Sambrell, Armour Of God 2)
and his band of twenty plus men invade a Native
American village and slaughter all the
inhabitants in order to get their scalps. After
they are finished and they are riding out, they
soon spot Joe on a distant hill, and one of them
comments that he's "still tracking us." Huh?
This is the first time they have spotted him.
This is not the last time the movie makes us
question just what the filmmakers were thinking.
There is the whole reason why Joe is pursuing
Duncan and his men throughout the movie, picking
them off one by one. It will be pretty obvious
to viewers from the start as to why Joe is doing
so, especially since the massacre scene at the
beginning of the movie took time to show Duncan
killing and scalping one specific woman. But the
movie midway through has Joe volunteering his
help to defend the citizens of a town against
Duncan and his men... but only if he gets paid.
This attempt to hide Joe's real motivations
(which are revealed at the end of the movie to
no surprise) not only is unconvincing, but this
sudden desire for money makes Joe a less
sympathetic figure. The movie also tries (and
fails) to make a big secret with a character in
the town who is secretly helping Duncan and his
gang. He is first seen speaking to Duncan
outside his town, and the movie makes pains to
try and hide his identity by photographing him
from behind or with bottles and other objects
hiding his face. The problem with that is that
his face usually isn't completely obscured; we
see pieces of his face in these shots that are
not obscured. Viewers will be able to put these
pieces together in their mind and come up with a
complete face, so that when this "mystery man"
is finally seen later before his traitorous side
is revealed to everybody, we know before the
revelation just who the traitor in the town is.
Not only does Navajo Joe fail
in its attempts to make big secrets and reveal
them to great surprise, but other parts of the
movie are just as equally badly handled. There
are several moments in the movie when something
happens that you just won't believe could or
would happen. There is that opening massacre,
for example. There is the suggestion that Duncan
and his men attacked the village so that they
could get the scalps and sell them. But Duncan
is reminded later that scalps are now worthless,
especially scalps of women and children;
apparently they massacred everyone in the
village just for the heck of it. Then shortly
after Duncan and his men invade the town, the
sheriff (all by himself) walks up to the band of
desperados and thinks he can cart them all to
jail. (I think I would be keeping a secret just
as badly as the movie if I didn't reveal that
the sheriff gets killed for his troubles.) There
is also some nonsense about the train that the
movie focuses on during the middle stretch. We
are supposed to believe that not only do Duncan
and his men know how to run a steam engine, but
that Joe also knows how to control one as well.
I can't leave out the nonsense about the
telegraph wires as well. Just before Duncan and
his men take over the train that is carrying the
money they so desperately crave, they are seen
cutting the telegraph lines. Yet much later in the
town, the telegraph operator comes running out
of his office and informs the townspeople that
just seconds earlier, the telegraph line had
been cut as he was taking down a message!
Not only is Navajo Joe weak in
its script, it is often weak in its production
values. The movie
looks like someone kept a firm hand from people
spending too much. This is a surprise, because
this movie was made by the Dino De Laurentiis
studios, whose European productions of the
period had ample budgets. In this case, we have
stuff an Indian village consisting of just two
wigwams and a handful of inhabitants, a train
just pulling two cars, the sound of a herd of
horses sounding like just two or three horses,
and some of the worst day-for-night photography
I have ever seen. I've gone on for some time on
the shortcomings of this movie, and you may be
wondering if I found anything of merit. Well, I
did find a few positive things, such as
Reynolds. He does well in the physical part of
his role, with the action scenes requiring him
to leap and roll around considerably, and he is
suitably brooding. (I can't tell you about his
acting because his voice was dubbed by another
actor.) There is also a great musical score by
the great Ennio Morricone (who uses a pseudonym,
possibly because he saw enough of the movie
while scoring it.) And despite all those problems I
described earlier, I never found the movie
boring, though it comes close to being so at
times even with the action sequences, which are
kind of mechanically done. However, I should add
that my tolerance towards the movie probably
comes from the fact that I am a big fan of
spaghetti westerns. While I don't regret seeing
the movie, I probably won't go out of my way to
see it again. So if you're not a spaghetti
western fanatic, forget it.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: A Bullet For
Sandoval, Cheyenne Warrior,
If You Meet...
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