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A Hidden Gem
3 February 2004
As everyone knows, the Spaghetti Westerns of the 60's and early 70's revolutionised the Western genre and inspired the Americans into making more good ones. And of all the Italian Westerns, Sergio Leone's are paramount. Naturally with Leone there are the three classics with Clint Eastwood; followed by the epic "Once Upon A Time In The West" with Fonda & Bronson in 1968, and then this one in 1971. And of all the films mentioned here, guess which always draws the short straw! This is a great shame as this film is certainly no worse than the others, and if anything its a lot funnier, with great humour balanced with good action and two unforgettable characters, beautifully drawn-out by the lead actors. Rod Steiger plays a chicken theif who gets drawn into the Mexican Revolution of 1918 by IRA man James Coburn. and it is HIS journey from lovable rogue to reluctant realist which forms the lynchpin for the movie. Both actors are in full character mode complete with convincing accents, and the film never fails to make its point. But like all genres or movie canons, once the public gets a taste for something special nothing else will do, and although this movie held up at the time, it is not often remembered. YES Leone could go beyond the Dollars!
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Pure Hollywood
13 November 2003
I have just been watching this movie and felt that as the only other comment on it was some excuse for a review by some person with rather questionable views above, i thought i'd lend my opinion (after all, i couldn't be any worse). "Thunderbirds Are Go", the first full-length feature film version of Gerry & Sylvia Anderson's top fantasy series of the 60's is quite a landmark indeed.

Landmark (?), i hear you ask. Well, yes. The whole Thunderbirds series was nothing but pure Hollywood at it's best; and this movie - as well as the one that came afterwards - only served to expand that tradition, whilst still maintaining the elements and formula that made it famous in the first place in 1965. The movie, has style, wit, incredible drama, and for its time, an astonishing view of the mid-21st.Century. Of course, most of it was pure fantasy and could never ever be real. The amount of times i've heard it said that the Thunderbirds machines couldn't even get off the ground is enormous. But that's ok, it's fantasy. And what good would a decent adventure be, if it didn't transport you out of reality and into a fascinating fantasy world where everything was different! As i say, the best Hollywood tradition. And of course, what made these productions so very special (at least to us Brits), was that 1. it was British, and 2. the heroes were all Puppets! Unbelievable to this day, i know. Yet as we are soon to be confronted by a million dollar live-action Thunderbirds epic, i think it is true to point out, that the main charm in the Thunderbirds adventures WAS the fact that they were acted by Puppets. So charming, so much a throwback to our own innocence (let alone a throwback to a much more innocent time when it was made); how could that be improved upon? The model work and special effects, especially the Zero-X Space-probe, are all extremely effective (as you would expect from Derek Meddings), and whether you are a Thunderbirds fan or not, it will be hard to knock this piece of Movie/TV history off it's perch. This movie being years ahead of its time, a great piece of fun and a fine addition to a classic series.
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