Friday, October 26, 2012

The Auteurs #16: Sergio Leone




The man who would reinvent the Western in the 1960s, there is no filmmaker who is lauded for this effort better than Sergio Leone. Though he would make a film films that were outside of that genre, the Italian filmmaker helped create a new sub-genre in the form of the Spaghetti Western that brought new levels of violence, protagonists, and a visual style that strayed from the world of the American west. Since his death in 1989, Leone is considered to be one of the great filmmakers as he would end up influencing countless filmmakers in the years to come.

Born in Rome, Italy on January 3, 1929, Leone was the son of filmmaker Vincenzo Leone and actress Edvige Valcarhengi where the former was considered a pioneer in Italian silent cinema. Leone grew up around the film industry as he would often be in the set of his father’s films. It was there he would learn his trade. By age 19, Leone was already the assistant director for Vittorio de Sica during the making of de Sica’s Bicycle Thieves. Leone would spent the late 1940s and most of the 1950s as an assistant director while writing screenplays for the sword-and-sandal films of the time.

Among the works Leone was doing as an assistant director was shooting scenes for movies like Quo Vadis and Ben-Hur as his work in the chariot race scene in the latter made it to the film’s final cut. Still, it was his work in the sword-and-sandal films that got him continuous work as it was very popular in Italy at the time despite the wave of Italian neorealist movies that were emerging as well as the art films by directors like de Sica, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni, Luchino Visconti, and many others.

The Last Days of Pompeii



During Leone’s tenure as an assistant director, he was asked to help assist filmmaker Mario Bonnard in making the sword-and-sandal film Gli Ultimi giorni di Pompei. The film was to tell the story about a centurion who seeks revenge for the death of his father in the hands of hooded bandits as it plays into a conspiracy to overthrow the rule of the Roman Empire and accuse the Christians of these crimes. Leone would write the film’s screenplay with a group of writers including Ennio de Concini and Sergio Corbucci. It was there that Leone and Corbucci would also work together for location scouting in Spain as it would give them ideas for the future westerns the two would make in the 1960s.

With Leone serving as assistant director and Corbucci shooting second unit, production went underway as it would star genre mainstay Steve Reeves and famed Spanish actor Fernando Rey. Yet, things grounded to a halt on the first day when Bonnard suddenly fell ill with liver issues preventing him to continue work on the film. Leone was eventually asked to take over during the production as he also helped Bonnard finish a previous film that also had Leone serve as assistant director. It was during the shooting where Leone would devise many framing devices as he was able to take advantage of the CinemaScope film stock to create amazing wide shots.

Despite the constraints he had to work with, Leone was able to do something with the story such as the film’s opening sequence in which a family is massacred as it revealed a lot of Leone’s penchant for graphic violence. It was Leone wanting to establish the kind of power that the villains wanted as it would later drive the protagonist’s vengeance. Even as he would create unique shooting styles for the film’s action that included the climatic scene when Mount Vesuvius erupts that would spell the end of Pompeii.

The film was released in November of 1959 as it was credited largely to Bonnard with Leone getting some credit in the end. The film was a hit in Italy where the sword-and-sandal genre was still popular at the time. The film’s success allowed Leone the chance to finally be promoted as a director as he was ready to take his first steps into his journey as a filmmaker.

The Colossus of Rhodes



With the clout he got his work as an assistant director and helping Mario Bonnard finish The Last Days of Pompeii, Leone was given the chance to make his first film as a director. With the sword-and-sandal genre already giving many filmmakers in Italy work, Leone decided to take part in the genre by creating another epic sword-and-sandal film in The Colossus of Rhodes. While the story was sort of a rehash of his previous film, Leone was able to get the chance to helm the film by himself as he created a project that would be ambitious despite the low budget he had to work with.

One of the film’s biggest coup was getting American film star Rory Calhoun in the lead of Dario while playing the leading lady would be Lea Massari who had just appeared in Michelangelo Antonioni’s landmark 1960 film L’Avventura. The film would revolve around a Greek military hero who arrives to an island to visit his uncle where the island was in turmoil over a rebellion to overthrow a tyrannical king who is unaware that is his insubordinate is staging a coup of his own. This would lead to the film’s protagonist to take part in the rebellion and reveal the coup.

Working with the same crew that he did with his previous film, Leone was able to keep the film’s budget in tact as well as stage some fantastic sequences that required lots of lavish set pieces. Notably the climatic earthquake scene towards the end of the film as it would have Leone maintain something that was big but with a small budget.

The film was released in 1961 where it was modestly successful but something happened along the way that would shake up the Italian film industry as the sword-and-sandal epics started to fail in the box office. The 1963 epic Cleopatra was a highly expensive film that barely recouped its budget while Luchino Visconti’s Il Gatopardo (The Leopard) was a commercial disappointment. This new crisis for the Italian film industry sent many reeling about what to do. For Leone, the end of the swords-and-sandal genre was a blessing as he was about to embark on something that would help revitalize the ailing Italian industry.

A Fistful of Dollars



During this transitional period in the Italian industry, Leone decided to forge ahead on his next project. Having been a fan of the Westerns since his days as a child while his mother starred in the first Italian-produced Western many years ago. Leone wanted to make a Western that would be very different from not just the ideals of its roots but also wanted to employ new ideas to the genre. While Leone loved the works of John Ford and other filmmakers of that genre, he felt that the idealism that was carried by John Wayne became heavy-handed. In wanting to strip down the idealism and go back to something that was more realistic and to the point. He would help create a new sub-genre that would re-shape the Western into new territory that many had not seen.

While Leone was inspired by the works of Dashiel Hammett that included Red Harvest, Leone was also inspired by Akira Kurosawa’s 1961 film Yojimbo. The latter of which Leone believed was inspired by Hammett’s novel as the film was about a samurai who doubles for two feuding gangs in hopes they kill each other off. Teaming up with a group of writers to create the project that was then titled The Magnificent Stranger, the project would be a remake of sorts on Kurosawa’s Yojimbo but refashioned into the Western.

While Leone gathered a cast of actors from Italy and Spain as the production was to be set in Spain as the U.S., Leone had difficulty getting an actor to play the lead role. Leone wanted more established actors like Henry Fonda, James Coburn, and Charles Bronson but they were too expensive for a film that was budgeted at around $200,000. Leone would finally find his lead in the form of a young actor named Clint Eastwood who had only done a few films while working regular in the TV western Rawhide. Eastwood accepted the part for $15,000 as he brought his costumes from the show and flew to Spain.

The film would mark the first of three films Leone would make with Eastwood as Eastwood would prove to be a formidable collaborator for Leone as he asked for less lines during the production. It was around that time that Leone would gain other people who would become part of his collaborative team in the years to come. The first of which was art director/costume designer Carlo Simi who would help create a look that was very different from other Westerns as it would shape the visual style that Leone wanted. The second person that would be part of the team was music composer Ennio Morricone. Morricone was an old schoolmate of Leone as the two reconnected after Leone heard some of Morricone’s work for other films. Their collaboration would widely be considered to be one of the great director-composer collaborations in cinema.

Knowing that he would make a film that was very different from the Italian art films of Federico Fellini and Michelangelo Antonioni, Leone wanted to incorporate something that audiences from the South of Italy would understand. Among them would be a lot of Catholic imagery that would surround some of the set while the violence would also be far more brutal. Leone would also employ cutting styles that would play up to the action that he would later perfect in the coming years as it would be part of a style that would define the genre.

The film was released in October of 1964 where it was not well-received by the critics in Italy who were appalled by the film’s low-budget schematics and its violence. Commercially, the film turned out to be a major hit as it helped the troubled Italian film industry while the film managed to gain attention throughout Europe. The film would become a major success in the continent as it would get better reviews from critics in Europe. Despite the film’s success, Leone was sued by Akira Kurosawa for copyright infringement as it was settled out of court were Kurosawa received 15% of the film’s box office gross as Kurosawa stated that he made more money off of that film than any of his films at the time. The film’s success not only gave Leone clout but also gave rise to an emerging sub-genre that would re-shape the Western.

For a Few Dollars More



The success of A Fistful of Dollars gave Leone more creative control of what he wanted to do with his next project. Teaming up with up-and-coming producer Alberto Grimaldi, Leone decided to up the ante of the Western by going into more original storylines that would set itself apart from its predecessor. Entitled For a Few Dollars More, the film would revolve around the Man with No Name who teams up with a mysterious man in black to go after a ruthless criminal and his gang so they can collect a bounty on all of these men.

Leone collaborated with Fulvio Montella and Luciano Vincenzoni to create the script for the film while Leone and Grimaldi waited word about Eastwood’s participation in the project as he had not seen A Fistful of Dollars. Eastwood was reluctant to take part in the project until he finally saw the film as he decided to work with Leone for the second time. With Eastwood on board, Leone and Grimaldi got a chance to have more freedom as well as a bigger budget as the film would cost around $600,000 to make. The bigger budget would allow Leone to try and get established actors for the project as he tried to get Lee Marvin and Henry Fonda for the role of Colonel Douglas Mortimer. Unfortunately, they were too expensive as he eventually settled on famed character actor Lee Van Cleef as Mortimer.

With the production once again shot in Almeria, Spain with interiors shot at Cinecetta Studios in Rome, Leone gathered his crew that included Carlo Simi to create a film that was much broader than its predecessor. Even as Leone would work with a cast that was a mixture of Italian, Spanish, and West German actors that would also include Klaus Kinski as one of the bandits in the hunchback Wild. The production gave him more to do with the compositions he wanted as well as the presentation of the showdowns. With cinematographer Massimo Dallamo, Leone got a chance to create lighting schemes and shots that would be much broader in scope.

While the production was a fun one for the most part, Leone and his crew found themselves dealing with actor Gian Maria Volonte who had previously played one of the key villains in A Fistful of Dollars. Volonte and Leone sparred over Leone’s insistence in having multiple takes as Volonte would end overacting during the production as Leone decided never to work with Volonte once filming was finished. Another aspect of the production that made things interesting for Leone was his collaboration with Ennio Morricone who would create pieces for the film before shooting had begun. It would allow Leone a lot of ideas for what he wanted as Morricone’s score broadened to include Fender guitars, whistles, and chimes to play up the sense of suspense and drama.

The film was released in November of 1965 to great acclaim and box office as the film was a major hit in Europe. The film’s release allowed the Italian film industry to produce Westerns that would be known as the Spaghetti Westerns as filmmakers like Sergio Sollima and Sergio Corbucci would arrive to create their own westerns that are considered hallmarks of the genre. The film also gave more attention to both Eastwood and Van Cleef as the latter found himself getting numerous offers to star in European-produced westerns as he became a major star there just as his career in the U.S. was waning. For Leone, the success of A Few Dollars More proved that he was no fluke as he aimed to take his ambitions even further for his next project.

The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly



With two back-to-back big hits under his belt, Leone went ahead to write what would be the third and final film of his trilogy. Entitled The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly, the film would have the Man with No Name face off against two men on a race to find Confederate gold during the American Civil War. It would be a project that would have Leone up the ante in terms of storylines, visual presentation, violence, suspense, and everything else that he had done previously with his films.
,br /> Collaborating with Luciano Vincenzoni, who had co-wrote For a Few Dollars More with Leone, on the film’s screenplay along with the duo of Furio Scarpelli and Agenore Incrocci with American translation by Mickey Knox. The project would involve many ideas that Leone wanted to incorporate into the story that would include the uneasy alliance between the Man with No Name and a bandit named Tuco as well as the themes of war as the film’s three central characters would encounter a battle during the American Civil War. Leone also decided to make the film into a prequel of sorts into how the Man with No Name got his famed poncho and hat along with attributes to the character.

With Carlo Simi and Ennio Morricone back on board for the project, Leone would gain two new collaborators who would be part of his team as well as expand his visual style. The first was editor Nino Baragli who would help devise a cutting style that would become one of the definitive moments of the film with its three-way showdown as he collaborated with Eugenio Alabiso for the film. The other was cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli who was already famous for his work with Italian filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini. Delli Colli would provide a much more broader visual style to the film as he would give Leone the wide depth of field that was craved for the film’s shootouts and other big moments such as the battle scene that the characters would encounter.

With Lee Van Cleef immediately joining the project to play the antagonist Angel Eyes, Clint Eastwood was once again reluctant to reprise his role until Leone offered him $250,000 to star in the film as well as taking a 10% gross of profits from the film’s American release even though the previous films hadn’t been shown in the U.S. Also joining the cast is famed character actor Eli Wallach who was already a mainstay with Western as Leone casted him in the role of Tuco. With a cast of Italian, Spanish, and West German actors fitting in for the rest of smaller roles in the film, production went underway in the spring of 1966.

Once again shot in Spain, Leone had ideas that were much bigger that alarmed the film’s cast and crew as Delli Colli would help creating some long shots and scenes that matched up to epic films of the early 1960s. Leone’s ambition definitely was a surprise to some as well as Leone’s sudden desire for perfection. Leone’s filmmaking tendencies wasn’t favored by Eastwood who was becoming disenchanted with the Spaghetti Western sub-genre as well as having trouble with dealing with Leone’s newfound ambition. The result would have the two men falling out as Eastwood decided to never work with Leone after shooting wrapped. The two would become estranged for years until they briefly reconciled toward the end of Leone’s life.

With Morricone creating the music just before the film was to be shot, the music would show a newfound evolution into what the composer would create. Among them was the film’s theme as it featured an array of sounds including a whistle, a Fender guitar, human voices, and various woodwinds as it would become one of the most defining themes in film. Morricone’s score would also delve into operatic arrangements such as the piece Ecstasy of Gold and the theme for the final duel as it would play up to the ambition that Leone wanted for the film as Morricone’s score is often regarded as one of the great film scores in history.

The film was released in late December of 1966 with a running time of 177-minutes where despite the negative reception it got for its violence. The film was a major hit in the European box office as plans for a U.S. release was delayed as United Artists were unsure of how to release the film. After cutting 14 minutes of the original film, much to the dismay of Leone, for its U.S. release, the film became a surprise hit as its subsequent films were also released including a slightly re-cut version of For a Few Dollars More. The Dollars Trilogy not only gave the western genre a shot in the arm but also brought Leone more widespread attention internationally. The film would also finally make Clint Eastwood a star in the U.S. though he and Leone were already moving on with the next phases of their careers.

Once Upon a Time in the West



The success of the Dollars trilogy gave Leone clout internationally as well as the attention of Hollywood. Yet, Leone was unsure about tackling another western as he wanted to move on to different territory. Despite an offer from United Artists to make a film with such big names like Charlton Heston and Kirk Douglas, Leone turned down the offer until Paramount Studios came in with an offer he couldn’t refuse. It would be the chance to work with one of Leone’s favorite actors in Henry Fonda as Leone decided to create a western with Fonda in the starring role.

For this new project, Leone decided the film would be part of another trilogy that would based on key events that would shape the landscape of American culture. The first part entitled Once Upon a Time in the West would be about two men who would come to the aid of a widow as she’s targeted by a railroad baron who has hired a killer as they want her precious land. For the story treatment, Leone would work with up-and-coming filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci and Dario Argento, who at the time was a film critic before making a name for himself as a horror filmmaker. Leone’s longtime friend Sergio Donati would eventually write with Leone for the film’s screenplay as they wanted to make a western that was different from their previous films as well as many other westerns.

Leone traveled to the U.S. for location scouting as he got to travel to famous landmarks where John Ford had shot some of his westerns as the film was shot partially in the U.S. as well as some of the locations set in Spain. Retaining his team of collaborators for the project, Leone also went ahead to start casting for the film as he grabbed two of Italian cinema’s big names in Claudia Cardinale as the film protagonist Jill McBain and Gabriele Ferzetti as the railroad baron Morton. Though Leone originally wanted Clint Eastwood in the role of Harmonica, Charles Bronson was chosen for the role while playing the role of Cheyenne would be Jason Robards. The film’s biggest shock would be in the antagonist Frank as Leone decided to have Henry Fonda in the role. The idea of Fonda as the villain was shocking as Fonda was unsure about doing the film until Eli Wallach convinced him to play the part.

Leone also brought in many character actors from westerns such as Woody Strode, Al Mulock, Keenan Wynn, and Jack Elam for small parts where Strode, Mulock, and Elam played the three men Harmonica meets in the film’s opening sequence. The sequence would be the start of many key visual moments Leone would devise with cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli where he wanted to slowly build up the element of suspense as well as create something that was more psychological in its motivations for the characters involved. It would also be the first time Leone used flashbacks as a plot device for the film as it revolves around Harmonica’s search for Frank.

Another major change that Leone wanted was to make a film that revolved around a female character as a lot of his previous films were dominated largely by male. It was Leone wanting to take chances with his narrative as the film would also be multi-layered with lots of storylines revolving around the film’s five central characters. With lots of wide shots, unique camera angles, and other visual traits that Leone would refine for this film, the film would be a far more ambitious project that anything Leone would make in his career.

Adding to the film’s grand visual style is the music of Ennio Morricone as he would create four different themes for Frank, Harmonica, Cheyenne, and Jill McBain. The mixture of folk and operatic orchestral music would play a key part to what Leone wanted for the film as Morricone devised harmonica-driven music for Harmonica while Frank is led by a dorbo-guitar riff. Cheyenne would be accompanied by a banjo while Jill’s theme is led by an operatic voice that add to the sweeping tone of the film. Notably with its ending as it revolved around what many believed to be the end of the west by the arrival of the railroad cross country.

The film was released in December of 1968 in Italy where it was well-received en Europe under its original running time of 166 minutes. When it came time for its U.S. release in May of 1969, Paramount decided to cut more than twenty-minutes of footage from the film against Leone’s consent where the film was not well-received in the U.S. and flopped in the U.S. Though the film would later be considered to be one of the great films of the western genre as well as being heralded by some filmmakers and critics as one of the best films ever made. The disappointing reaction the film had in the U.S. had Leone beginning to distrust Hollywood as he went on hiatus for the next few years.

Duck, You Sucker!



In the aftermath of Once Upon a Time in the West, Leone laid low during that period as he watched from afar to see that Spaghetti Western sub-genre that he helped popularize was now becoming derivative as elements of comedy was seeping into the genre. Leone was becoming disenchanted with the genre as he was also seeing a lot of political strife happening in Italy as social changes were going on. In response to the social revolutions that were happening in Italy, Leone decided to make a project that was about the fallacies of revolutions as he collaborated with Sergio Donati and later Luciano Vincenzoni to write a screenplay that was called Giu la testa! which meant in English, “duck your head, asshole!”

Leone’s intention for the project was to be involved as a producer where he would collaborate with another director for the project. Peter Bogdanovich was the first choice as briefly signed on only to leave due to lack of control issues. There were also claims that Sam Peckinpah was to helm the project only to not be involved due to financial issues with U.S. distributors in United Artists. It was around that time that Leone was also casting the film as he hoping to get some big names involved for the film. He eventually got James Coburn for the role of former IRA revolutionary John Nolan while Rod Steiger was cast in the role of Juan Miranda when Leone couldn’t get Eli Wallach for the part due to the studio wanting a bigger name.

With Italian star Romolo Valli signed on for the supporting role of revolutionary leader Dr. Villega, the film was set to go into production with assistant director Giancarlo Santi to helm the project. Yet, Coburn and Steiger refused to work with Santi as they wanted Leone to helm the project as Leone eventually agreed to helm the project full on with Santi shooting second unit. While Leone was able to retain Ennio Morricone and Nino Baragli for the project as Carlo Simi and Tonino Delli Colli were unavailable due to other commitments. Leone was able to hire Giuseppe Ruzzolini to shoot the picture as it was shot mostly in Spain with some of the film shot in Dublin, Ireland.

With the story set during the Mexican Revolution in the early 1900s, Leone wanted to create a film that was about changing times as it relates to the social revolutions of the early 1970s. With the film’s main story that revolves around the conflict between this IRA revolutionary and a poor man, Leone wanted to reveal his own views on revolution as he opens the film with a quote by Mao Zedong on the fallacy of revolution that is followed by robbery scene of Miranda robbing rich people who had earlier said things about the poor.

With Leone’s wanting to carefully plan his visuals, he was also inspired by paintings as he created one notable scene about an execution that looked similar to Francisco Goya’s The Third of May 1808 painting. Leone and Ruzzolini would create lighting schemes that was similar to that while Leone would also use flashbacks to establish Nolan’s background with revolutions and the loss of innocence that he encountered that would be accompanied by lush, operatic music by Ennio Morricone.

The film was released in the fall of 1971 in Italy where it did well commercially in its native country despite lukewarm reviews yet it got big praise from Italian filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini who found it to be Leone’s most interesting work to date. For the film’s subsequent releases in the rest of Europe and the U.S., the film went through many drastic cuts as its original 157-cut went through many versions including a slightly shorter version in Europe under the film’s then-working title Once Upon a Time… the Revolution while the U.S. release received a much shorter version of 121-minutes under the title A Fistful of Dynamite where both versions cut the Zedong quote as well as graphic scenes of violence. In 2007, the film was finally restored in its original cut for a DVD release as it also got a brief U.S. theatrical release where many critics praised the film as Leone’s most overlooked work.

My Name is Nobody/A Genius, Two Partners, & a Dupe



With the wave of the Spaghetti Westerns becoming derivative, Leone decided to be involved more as a producer where he would develop projects for other filmmakers at the time. One of them was a parody of the genre that he helped created in a film that was called My Name is Nobody that starred one of the sub-genre’s big stars in Terence Hill as a young gunslinger who teams up with an aging gunslinger going up against a ruthless gang. To play the role of the legendary Jack Beauregard, Henry Fonda accepted the role due to his friendship with Leone. Leone only chose to direct the film’s opening scene and shootout while letting its director Tonino Valerii helm the rest of the film.



The project was a success though both Leone and Valerii were unhappy about the film’s promotion being attested to Leone as it led to Leone to produce a loose sequel of sorts called A Genius, Two Partners, & a Dupe that would also star Hill. The film also featured Klaus Kinski, Miou-Miou, and Patrick McGoohan as it revolves con artists trying to swindle an Indian-hating cavalry man. The project would be directed by Damiano Damiani as Leone directed the film’s opening scene. The project was another commercial success in Europe upon its 1975 release but it was not well-received with critics as Leone was unhappy with the film’s final results as he stayed away from the directing chair in order to stay further in the background producing other films as it would continue a long hiatus period.

Once Upon a Time in America



Following a period during the 1970s and parts of the 1980s where Leone produced various projects for other filmmakers while directing commercials on the side. Leone was trying to develop a project that he had been wanting to do since the late 1960s. It would be in an adaptation of Harry Grey’s 1952 novel The Hoods as Leone wanted to create a gangster film that was unlike anything else out there. A project he originally wanted to do after the Dollars trilogy, Leone took a long time to get it made as he even turned down an offer to direct The Godfather during that period where he would also meet Grey to get him to agree to adapt The Hoods into what would become Leone’s final film in Once Upon a Time in America.

While Leone didn’t have the rights to the project at the time, he would write the film with six co-writers including Franco Arcalli who had co-written Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1972 film Last Tango in Paris as well as editing some of Bertolucci’s films in the 1970s. American writer Stuart Kaminsky was hired to translate the screenplay into English while adding some dialogue to the script as Leone continued to get the project going as it went through a period of development issues as actors like Gerard Depardieu, Jean Gabin, Richard Dreyfuss, James Cagney, Paul Newman, and many others were attached. When Leone finally got the rights to the story with Grey giving him permission, Leone was finally able to do the project with renowned producer Arnon Milchan backing him up.

Though Leone had intended to produce the film while a younger director would helm the project as John Milius was approached, Leone ended up helming the project himself. With the casting still in development, Leone finally got his cast as Robert de Niro got the lead role of Noodles while James Woods played the role Noodles’ friend Max, and Elizabeth McGovern in the role of Noodles’ love interest Deborah. Other actors who were cast for notable supporting parts included Tuesday Weld, Danny Aiello, Treat Williams, Joe Pesci, Burt Young, and William Forsythe as Leone was also looking for young actors to play the young versions of the film’s central characters. A young model named Jennifer Connelly was cast in the role of the young Deborah as filming finally began in June of 1982.

Leone would retain many of his collaborators for the film including cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli and art director Carlo Simi while it would expand to include costume designer Gabriella Pescucci and production designer Walter Massi for the film. Shooting took place largely in New York City with many of the film’s interiors shot at Cinecetta Studios in Rome, Italy along with additional scenes in St. Petersburg, Florida and in Quebec. Leone wanted to explore the world of the gangster era during the Prohibition as the film would span into three different timelines from the early 1900s when the characters were children to the era of Prohibition where Noodles, Max, and their gang were young gangsters on the rise. The third time period the film is set is in the late 1960s where Noodles returns to New York City where he’s given an assignment to kill a politician as he reflects on his past.

Leone wanted to create a story that was very different from other gangster films as it explored many themes of ambition, betrayal, loss, and regret as the story moved back and forth from Noodles’ time in the 1960s to the past as he recalls his time as a young hood who becomes a gangster. It would be a narrative device that Leone wanted in order to create the sense of dramatic impact Noodles would have as he deals with tragedy at an early age as well as loss and regret where it climaxes with this meeting between the man he’s supposed to kill. With editor Nino Baragli helping to flesh out the film’s narrative device, it would give Leone the chance to establish everything Noodles went through as it also featured an ending that many described to be an ambiguous one.

For the film’s score, Ennio Morricone created lots of pieces that he had been working on for years as it lived up to the ambition that Leone wanted. Though he was reluctantly about one of the film’s themes in the lush theme for the character of Deborah that sounded similar to the score for Once Upon a Time in the West. It would prove to be effective as Morricone also used an array of Chinese instruments including the pan flute that would also be effective for the film.

After numerous delays in the editing as the film went through various versions as Leone even thought of releasing the film in two parts as it featured a total running time of six hours. Not wanting to risk a major failure due to the troubled release of Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1976 epic Novocento that had a running time of over five hours. Leone finally cut the film to a running time of 229 minutes as he premiered the film at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival where it received a 15-minute standing ovation. When it came time for the film’s U.S. release, the MPAA had issues over the film’s violence and sexual content that included a very graphic rape scene. When the film was subject to test screenings in the U.S. before its official release, things got worse as James Wood stated in the 2004 documentary Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession saying “because of one lousy test screening in Chicago. They hired the editor of Police Academy to re-cut the film.”

The Ladd Company and editor Zach Staenberg would cut the 229-minute film into 139-minute film and turn the film’s back-and-forth narrative into a more chronological-based film. Leone was extremely upset by the re-cut version of the film as many of Leone’s friends knew how heartbroken he was by how the studio butchered his film. For the American film critics that saw the original film and had praised it, they panned the re-cut version which flopped in the U.S. while for those that hadn’t seen the original version like L.A. Times critic Sheila Benson who named it the worst film of 1984 only to see the original version when it played on the L.A.-based cable channel Z-Channel a year later and later put the original version as one of the best films of the 1980s.

In the aftermath of the film’s release, Leone spent the last five years of his life trying to develop a project about the Russian Revolution called Leningrad: The 900 Days that would star Robert de Niro as an American photographer covering the war as he falls for a Russian woman. It was among a slew of projects Leone wanted to do as he later gained funding for Leningrad in 1989. Then on April 30, 1989 at the age of 60, Leone died of a heart attack as it marked the end of one of cinema’s great careers.

In the years since Leone’s death, countless filmmakers have acknowledged Leone’s influence on cinema while critics and film buffs also cite Leone as one of the great filmmakers of the 20th Century. In 1992, Clint Eastwood released the western Unforgiven to great acclaim and box office as it won four Oscars including Best Picture and Best Director to Eastwood as he dedicated the film to Leone as well as his Dirty Harry director Don Siegel. In the 1990s, two emerging American filmmakers in Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez both acknowledge Leone as one of their key influences. Rodriguez’s Mariachi trilogy was directly inspired by the Dollars trilogy while Tarantino’s Kill Bill series featured elements of the Leone visual style as well as the music of Ennio Morricone.

Other filmmakers outside of the Western genre has also acknowledge Leone’s influence such as Rian Johnson whose 2005 high school-noir film Brick had touches of the Leone visual style. Gore Verbinski is another filmmaker who expressed love for Leone as his 2011 animated film Rango featured lots of references to the western including the films of Leone. Since his passing, Leone’s films had also been re-evaluated by critics as the arrival of the DVD helped raise Leone’s reputation where in 2003, MGM released a restored version of The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly with material that got cut out of the film’s original American release. This led to the release of newly-restored versions of For a Few Dollars More, Once Upon a Time in the West, and Duck, You Sucker! as they were finally presented in their original cuts to a new generation of filmgoers.

In 2012, Martin Scorsese commissioned a restoration of Once Upon a Time in America that features more than 20 minutes of footage that was cut from the film’s original release. While the extended version is still in the works for an upcoming DVD/Blu-Ray release, audiences got a chance to see at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival as it was presented by Robert de Niro, James Woods, Elizabeth McGovern, Jennifer Connelly, and Ennio Morricone.

It’s been nearly fifty years since the release of A Fistful of Dollars and nearly thirty years since the release of Once Upon a Time in America. Yet, Sergio Leone has managed to create a legacy that is simply unforgettable. Through the westerns he made in the 1960s and early 70s along with Once Upon a Time in America, there is clearly no doubt that Leone is among one of the great filmmakers to ever step behind a camera. His influence is definitely widespread as he is beloved by film buffs and filmmakers alike. Though Sergio Leone may no longer be around, his legacy will still live on through the films he’s made as there will always be someone to watch them.

Related: Once Upon a Time: Sergio Leone

© thevoid99 2012

1 comment:

Chip Lary said...

Good post. I've only seen his five most famous movies, but I liked them all.

By the way, for a second I was wondering why you had a picture of George R.R. Martin at the top of your post, then I realized it was Leone. Here's Martin for comparison: http://www.imdb.com/media/rm3295198720/nm0552333